We've got a guide full of information about the best places to shop for AC Milan items online - shirts, jerseys, training tops, jackets etc., with shopping sites ranked based on the quality they offer to an AC Milan fan. Go read it now at our AC Milan shopping page!

Massimo Ambrosini could join Kaka at MLS side Orlando City, it has been claimed in the Italian Press.

Reports earlier on Monday suggested that the Milan playmaker already has a verbal agreement with the new MLS franchise to sign for next season.

However, Calcio Mercato believe that he could be joined by former Rossoneri teammate Massimo Ambrosini.

The veteran midfielder is currently in the last year of his contract at Fiorentina, and the story indicates that the former Italy international will look for one last payday as he opts to leave the peninsula and start afresh in the States.

Barbara Berlusconi says that Milan’s desire is to base their future around sourcing and developing talent from across the globe.

The Rossoneri are enduring a difficult season on the pitch as they undergo a restructuring away from it, spearheaded by Silvio Berlusconi’s daughter.

Talking with FourFourTwo, the club director has considered how the reorganisation may affect the playing side of things in the future.

“These are matters within Adriano Galliani’s expertise. Milan is facing a major reorganisation,” Berlusconi has considered in an interview recently released.

“It is preparing itself as best as possible to face the new challenges of a calcio that has certainly changed.

“We place great emphasis on young people, on a structure of scouts able to unearth new talent around the world. But this is without renouncing big purchases, for the top players.”

Berlusconi was asked whether the preference was in creating a strong team without spending, or creating income to make a team stronger.

“Both of these things. The goal is to recruit young talent before they become top players, and before the costs can be, for us, difficult to sustain.

“To increase revenue, then, is a central challenge for us. Just so we can self-finance, improve facilities and afford some more top players.

“It is a challenge that will give results first in the medium term, not sooner than three years.”

The 29-year-old considered also the changing face of Italian football in recent years.

“In 2000, three of the top five clubs in Europe were Italian, by revenue. Today we are far behind. The model of football for the future is inevitably a mix of sporting success and ability to achieve commercial, financial and managerial results.

“And the best results on the field should be from those who adopt a structured and efficient business strategy.

“A good example? Germany, with stadiums that are owned, and rich sponsorships, without follies they have created a virtuous system, an example to follow.

“Accounts are in order, stadiums are full, there is commercial activity and many young people on the field.

“Then, we must remember that football is not only a business for those who earn millions of Euros, but also for the many jobs that it can create.”

The mother of two was asked about the increasing role of women in football.

“I do not see the presence of women as a merit or value added. But simply as a fact. Increasingly, women are taking key roles in football clubs.

“This is important because the clubs are now more companies, and football is really a business. And in all companies the number of and importance of women has been steadily growing.”

Carlo Ancelotti believes that Milan’s struggles stem from a lack of investment in the playing staff, compared to previous years.

The Rossoneri have endured a difficult season and have seen Clarence Seedorf fall under scrutiny for struggles since replacing Max Allegri as Coach in January.

For the team’s former Coach, the difference at the club now is in the money being spent on it.

“There are difficulties related to the lack of being able to make investments like in the past,” Ancelotti has considered this week to Radio Anch’Io Sport.

“Then it becomes difficult to remain competitive if you do not spend, this is a year of transition and I wish luck to Seedorf and to the club, as much as possible.

“Clarence has knowledge, skills and personality to be a good Coach, he lacks experience, but if you do not start then you will never gain it. First must be the desire to do it, then comes the experience.”

Carlo Ancelotti has considered the differences that he sees between football in Italy’s Serie A and Spain’s La Liga.

The former Parma, Juventus and Milan Coach is currently working at Real Madrid and has considered where the two Leagues are dissimilar at the moment.

“Spanish football is different and reflects the philosophy and culture of this country,” Ancelotti has told Radio Anch’Io Sport.

“And it is mostly played with much possession of the ball. It is different, certainly, to Italian football, which is experiencing a particular moment.

“There are cycles, it remains technically competitive, but to improve it is normal that there is a need for innovations in infrastructure.

“Spanish football is alive because there are young players who are interesting. We brought in five players to the squad this year, but everyone is talking about Gareth Bale.”

Another person everyone is talking about is Diego Simeone, who has Atletico Madrid top of La Liga ahead of Barcelona and Ancelotti’s Madrid.

“Atletico are an Italian team, one of the few who does not practice tiki-taka, but are more to the point.

“They are an incredible surprise, some expected that they would have given up, but they have not. There is a positive air around their team, they will hold until the end. Then, it is as question of details.

“Italy is not concerned in this way - we know that we have always given more importance to the tactics.

“As for Juventus, the results in Europe are not related to the Italian League. There is less quality, but the rhythms have always been different. The gap can be recovered peacefully, I have no doubt.”

Ancelotti considered Real Madrid’s performance of late, which has them third in Spain.

“In the League we have slipped to third because of two setbacks. The dream is La Decima [the 10th European Cup, but the League is a concrete objective.

“The League is interesting because beyond the three teams at the top, there are teams like Zaragoza and Athletic Bilbao who are very competitive.

“I have a strong team and complete - there are champions, experienced players and young people from the academy.

“Ronaldo? It is a simple thing to train him because he is an immense professional. He has understood that talent devoid of professionalism does not allow you to stay at the highest levels. That is the same for him, for Ibrahimovic and for many others.

“In Italy? The champions nourish affection and have no confinement to the Italian League.”

The 54-year-old considered Italian attitudes towards match officials.

“In Italy there is so much, too much pressure. They all have individual quality, but in Spain and England they are under less pressure.

“Would television replays help? No, for the love of God. There’s already too much, it should not be put in the field.”

Ancelotti was asked for his view on Rafa Benitez and Antonio Conte’s fall-out yesterday evening over how much each club has spent relating to their respective levels of success.

“Fortunately I am a Coach, not an accountant. I leave the sums to the President, I deal with tactics and other things.”

“Has the storm passed? I don’t know, I didn’t create the storm. We are very happy for all the Milanisti who can have a calmer time now,” he told Sky Sport Italia.

The Rossoneri had lost four on the bounce in all competition, but now have seven points from the last seven days.

“Kaka worked hard in training and as a man he is a guarantee, so I am very happy he is able to express himself at his best.

“Will Kaka be here next season? I cannot talk for Kaka, as it’s his future. There are no doubts on what I think of him. There are other players who deserve a mention, as Honda did everything to help the team tonight and it’s a shame he didn’t score, as he has the quality to make the difference.

“I said the other day that the club’s objective remains, which is to qualify for Europe.”

Cristian Zaccardo was surprisingly picked rather than Cristian Zapata to fill in for the suspended Philippe Mexes and Kevin Constant.

“Zapata is a player who got injured and the others did well, so it is simply an issue of form. I consider him very useful for our defence.”

Milan’s improvement has come after they went to Rome on a training retreat.

“From the start I tried to bring balance to the defence, but obviously when a Coach arrives with a different mentality it takes time to settle and get the idea. As time goes on, we are more and more able to keep that balance in both phases with 11 players.

“The improvement of the team is thanks to time and the players getting to know each other within this new approach.

“We previously lost games when we played well, such as Juventus, Atletico Madrid and Napoli, when we had nine players suffering from a high temperature, and Parma when we were down to 10 men after five minutes. These are not excuses, but reasons why those games didn’t go the way we wanted them to.”

Adel Taarabt had been dropped for a few rounds and Seedorf explained why.

“I can see more concentration, as Taarabt is creative and wants to always be creative. I saw in training he suffered his inability to perform the way he wanted to and it really hurt him, so I preferred to protect him and ease him in more slowly when he regained confidence.”

The Rossoneri seemed to turn the crisis around, as after four straight defeats in all competition they held Lazio to a draw and won 2-0 at Fiorentina midweek. Philippe Mexes and Kevin Constant sat out bans with Riccardo Montolivo, Mattia De Sciglio, Ignazio Abate, Marco Amelia, Andrea Petagna and Stephan El Shaarawy injured. Chievo had Luca Rigoni suspended, Matteo Rubin and Roberto Guana sidelined.

The Flying Donkeys had never won at San Siro against Milan, managing two draws from 11 previous attempts. It was a special day for Ricky Kaka, who marked his 300th appearance in a Rossoneri jersey.

It took just three minutes for the hosts to break the deadlock, as Mario Balotelli got on the end of an Adil Rami cross from the right for a volley off the inside of his left boot from six yards.

Moments later Adel Taarabt stung Michael Agazzi’s gloves at the near post with a powerful strike, but after 15 minutes Chievo came out of their shell. A dreadful Urby Emanuelson clearance risked an own goal and as the move continued Simone Bentivoglio’s shot was beaten away by Cristian Abbiati.

Milan-owned Alberto Paloschi volleyed over the bar from just inside the area, but Kaka marked his 300th appearance in style by doubling the Rossoneri’s lead.

He snuck round the back to surprise the Chievo defence, who were focused on Balotelli, and left totally unmarked to chest down and turn in a Keisuke Honda cross from the right.

Honda should’ve made it 3-0 on 38 minutes when Balotelli generously rolled across for the unmarked Japan international, but he incredibly ballooned over an open goal from seven yards.

Sulley Muntari was strethcered off just before half-time to make way for Michael Essien due to a calf problem.

After the restart a free kick found Honda’s header, beaten away by Agazzi from point-blank range. However, as the move continued Kaka curled a magnificent right-foot finish from the left side of the box in off the far post to leave the goalkeeper helpless.

Chievo hit the woodwork with a very strange Bentivoglio corner, as it dribbled along the by-line and through Victor Obinna’s legs to surprise Abbiati and clip the outside of the near post.

Kaka was substituted and given a standing ovation on his 300th official appearance in a Milan jersey. Bostjan Cesar prevented a fourth goal with a crucial sliding tackle to block off Balotelli as he was pulling the trigger.

Taarabt had a shot charged down in the box, but his penalty appeals for a handling offence were waved away.

In the final minute Cyril Thereau took down a cross for Ivan Radovanovic’s daisy-cutter to skim the upright.

In stoppages Cristian Zaccardo’s first touch let him down and he tripped Thereau on the follow-through for a penalty. Thereau went to take it himself, but a powerful spot-kick cannoned off the underside of the crossbar and back out off the ground.

Ricky Kaka said his 300th appearance in a Milan shirt went “better than I could’ve expected,” beating Chievo 3-0.

The Brazilian netted his 12th Serie A brace after a Mario Balotelli volley at San Siro.

“The goal means many things. It is a special moment for us, tonight was an important achievement for me to play 300 games and it went better than I could’ve expected. I am very happy,” he told Sky Sport Italia.

The Rossoneri were in crisis a week ago, but have now notched up two consecutive victories.

“Football is wonderful and painful precisely because it changes so quickly. I said last week our locker room was not divided and people could see that tonight.

“We had two wins and a draw now, so these are results that will help us to end the season on a high.

“At the moment we are testing out many things with the Coach to find the best solution. I’ve always said I like to play in the middle, but I will play anywhere the team needs me.”

Even with this upturn in results, Milan’s chances of qualifying for the Europa League remain slim.

“What we do today is useful for the future, as the way we play and are set out on the field will help us next season.”

Kaka was asked about his comments that he’d like to play in the American MLS.

“I am happy here. Every time I am at Milan, people only want to talk about my future!”

Adriano Galliani hinted Milan will have Giovanni Galli as director of sport and revealed a Kaka contract clause.

Galli was a goalkeeper for the Rossoneri and is currently working for Fiorentina, another of his former clubs.

“We haven’t made a decision yet. Directors can’t change clubs during the same season, so we will make a decision at the end of this campaign,” CEO Galliani told Sky Sport Italia.

“Galli is a Milanista, a good man and has excellent scouting credentials. We will certainly be bringing in a director of sport.”

Galliani was asked about the vicious criticism of the club from Paolo Maldini, but refused to discuss it.

“I will never reply to Maldini, as I have too much of a wonderful memory of him as a player.”

This weekend Ricky Kaka said he must talk to Galliani at the end of the season and was tempted by a move to the MLS.

“It’s very simple. Kaka has a contract until June 30 2015, but if we don’t qualify for the Champions League then he has a clause allowing him to leave. We will discuss it, but I firmly believe he will stay.”

Clarence Seedorf seems to have turned things around with a draw against Lazio and win over Fiorentina since the team went into a training retreat with Galliani.

“All Coaches depend on results, this isn’t news. Seedorf was wanted by the club and signed a contract for two and a half years, but like all tacticians much of his future depends on results. We are confident.

“It was perfectly normal internal dialogue and we had never left the team alone. When results don’t arrive, everyone has problems: the Coach, players and directors. When we win, everyone thinks we are the best. We know this is what football is like.”

Portuguese agent Jorge Mendes is at San Siro tonight and was seen chatting to Galliani. Are there transfers in the works?

Clarence Seedorf has urged his Milan side to continue their good run of form with a win against Chievo tomorrow.

The Rossoneri host the Flying Donkeys at San Siro on Saturday, looking for the three points that should take them back into the top half of the table.

And after a draw at Lazio and a win in midweek against Fiorentina, the Dutch tactician has insisted that his men are full of confidence going into this weekend.

“The last two matches have been very important for us and we should remember that we haven’t always got what we deserved in some games,” he told a Press conference.

“It’s clear that when results are not forthcoming, various other factors come into play. We reacted well and we’re sticking together.

“We’ve shown courage and we have improved as we saw against Lazio and Fiorentina. We’ll be looking for three points tomorrow.

“I think the team will take to the pitch tomorrow as they did in Florence. We have to keep on playing with this spirit.

“I’ve been working on cohesion since my first day on the job, we haven’t always been successful but in the end the results will come from the pitch.

“I’ve been working with my own method since arriving here. I don’t just look at the result but the substance of the performance. We’re happy we got a result against a god team.”

The Dutch tactician then commented on Alberto Paloschi’s return to San Siro, and the style of play he’s looking to implement.

“I haven’t seen much of Paloschi but I know him. He’s doing well this season and it’ll be a pleasure to see him tomorrow.

“We want to show our strength tomorrow but it won’t be easy as many teams come to the San Siro to shut up shop but we’re not worried and I’m sure the fans will ensure a positive atmosphere.

“I know Kaka very well and I want to get the best out of him. If he has to run up and down the pitch like a full back, he becomes less effective. I think he can give more by playing closer to the striker.

“Poli can play anywhere in the middle and that’s his strength, he’s balanced. Zapata is in good form, he’s training well and when we need him, he’ll be called up. Bonera can play at full back or in the middle of the defence.”

Seedorf went on to remark on Mario Balotelli’s performance against the Viola in the week, praising the Italy international.

“All credit to Balotelli after the Fiorentina game as he played at both ends of the pitch for 90 minutes.

“He behaved well with the referee as well and that shows growth. If he continues like this, we’ll all be very happy.

“I think Prandelli is a great man and a great coach and I appreciate what he had to say about the relationship between myself and Mario.

“I think Mario has shown big improvements in the last game, both as a man and a player.”

The Coach concluded by admitting that his side have hit a nadir this term, like another European giant.

“I like looking to the future. Like a lot of big clubs in Europe, Milan is going through a transition, just like Manchester United.

“We all need to set ourselves objectives. We need patience and I’m sure the fans will appreciate that if they continue to see the team’s commitment on the pitch.”

The ex-Rossonero openly criticised the recent decline of the team, claiming to the Gazzetta dello Sport that all his hard work in building Milan had been destroyed.

Desailly acknowledged that things are being operated in a different manner to the five years he spent at the club, and feels Silvio Berlusconi’s lack of funds and the failure to produce young talent is an issue.

“Paolo was my captain and I can understand his frustration,” Desailly told Football Italia’s South African correspondent Rossella Marrai.

“After 15 years at the top level, he was committed to the club and he wanted to put his finger on various negative things that was done.

“You cannot blame Galliani. He was part of the success of Milan - on his choices, on the players they brought in like myself, George Weah and keeping some of the historic Italian players.

“They have taken some wrong decisions, but you still need to believe in them, and that it won’t be as terrible as everyone is thinking.

“When you lose some of your historic players, and you don’t go to the Primavera and replace them with new talent, you face some problems.

“Even if they have the likes of Baresi, Eranio and Filippo Galli I was expecting to see more players coming up and they are not.”

The 45-year-old went on to add: “There is also the money issue that Berlusconi doesn’t want to take money from his pocket - they are running things a bit differently now.

“Unfortunately, he bought some old players - ones that weren’t expensive - to try and see if they can still perform.

“It did not work. It worked at the time of Ronaldinho and Ronaldo but this time none of the experienced or the young players are performing. This has affected the spirit and the team at Milan.”

Desailly recently qualified for his UEFA coaching badges, a prerequisite in Italian football, and one current Diavolo head Coach Clarence Seedorf doesn’t have.

“Seedorf is the future. That season was finished and it’s just up to the fans not to be down and start off fresh next year,” continued the 1998 World Cup winner with France.

“They cannot sack him because he is not responsible for how the team is formed. I think it was a good idea.

Serie A clubs increased revenue last season by eight per cent, but also spending by four per cent, with total debt set at €1.5bn.

The Gazzetta dello Sport have followed up a recent report on the state of the Italian top-flight clubs’ accounts, which revealed earlier this month that only six teams ran a profit during 2012-13.

A more in-depth look at the accounts of the 20 clubs has produced overall figures for the League and shows that total revenue has increased on 2011-12’s figures by eight per cent, to €1.772bn, whilst total spending increased four per cent to €2.365bn, resulting in a loss of an aggregate figure for last season between the clubs of €203m.

Total debt remains at €1.572bn between Serie A’s sides, with every club posting a debt, Fiorentina with the lowest at €5.1m and Inter the worst at €293m. League leaders Juventus hold a debt of €227.1m whilst Milan owe a total of €221.6m.

Roma with €136.3m and Lazio with €102m are the only two other clubs with debt into nine figures.

Cruzeiro and Brazil defender Dedè “is liked by Milan, but also tracked by other Italian clubs,” said his agent.

The 25-year-old centre-back only moved from Vasco da Gama to Cruzeiro less than a year ago, but has already been heavily linked with a Serie A switch this summer.

“At the moment Dedè is happy at Cruzeiro, where he has the chance to prove himself in the Copa Libertadores and earn a place in the World Cup squad,” agent Giuliano Aranda told tuttomercatoweb.

“I did read the reports. It’s true Dedè is liked by Milan, but also tracked by other Italian clubs. The Rossoneri are a great side, despite their recent difficulties.

“I can confirm there has been no direct contact with Milan or other Serie A clubs. I haven’t spoken to anybody, even if the interest in Dedè remains.

“Could he come to Europe over the summer? At the moment he is focused on doing well with Cruzeiro, but I won’t rule anything out.

“Playing in Europe and Italy in the future is one of his objectives. We’ll see how the situation develops over the next few weeks, as I think between April and May we’ll have a clearer idea of any summer transfer activity.”

The Coach spoke to Sky Sport Italia after a 2-0 victory in Florence, which put the recent crisis behind them.

“It was a wonderful victory, because the team really did well over the last few days to react with two positive results.

“Considering the performance, the three points were deserved, as we won against a great team that plays wonderful football.

“We were a little more motivated and I saw that hunger to win in my players. It was a win for Milan and all the Milanisti. We dedicate it to one Milanista in particular, as Milan Channel journalist Claudio Lippi left us a year ago.”

Balotelli returned to the starting XI and his free kick was parried into the path of Philippe Mexes for the opener, then he curled in his own set play.

“The lads respected Fiorentina’s strength and possession football, so it was important to remain united and hit them with pace.

“A centre-forward has to work going forward and back, so when his team goes too deep he needs to spread it wide to help the others come up.

“I asked Mario for intensity and in that sense he had a great game in both phases. We already knew he had talent and could take free kicks like that, but I was most impressed by his consistency and intensity tonight.”

Seedorf took the opportunity to snap at the media, who had claimed he was already on the verge of dismissal.

“Many false things were said. I am open to criticism as long as it is constructive, but what I see here is the intention to create controversy by spreading falsehoods disguised as fact.

“The people who wrote certain things have to deal with their own conscience, because mine is clear. I tried to keep the players focused on the game, but it was impossible not to be aware of what was being said outside.”

Mario Balotelli created one goal and scored another to end Milan’s crisis with a surprise 2-0 win away to Fiorentina.

The Viola were back in contention for third place after beating Napoli at the weekend, a fine way to put their Europa League elimination behind them. The Rossoneri were in dire straits with one point from the last five games in all competition and pressure rising on Coach Clarence Seedorf.

Fiorentina had to deal with an injury crisis, missing Mario Gomez, Giuseppe Rossi, Anderson, Juan Manuel Vargas, Marvin Compper, David Pizarro and Ante Rebic, so Alessandro Matri faced the club he left on loan in January. Andrea Poli was suspended for Milan, who were without Mattia De Sciglio, Stephan El Shaarawy and Ignazio Abate.

Milan were unbeaten in their last seven trips to Florence in all competition, but hadn’t beaten the Viola home or away in the last five meetings.

Keisuke Honda returned to the starting XI, but within three minutes hit a fresh-air shot on Kaka’s assist. Matri was taking on his old teammates and wasted a couple of early scoring opportunities.

Mario Balotelli returned to the line-up after he was dropped against Lazio, but was booked for dissent after 16 minutes.

Fiorentina lost Manuel Pasqual to injury, so he made way for Facundo Roncaglia.

Milan took the lead against the run of play, as Neto only beat a Balotelli free kick into the path of Philippe Mexes for the tap-in.

Neto fingertipped a long-range Adel Taarabt effort out from under the bar after beating away a Sulley Muntari snapshot.

Milan had a great team move before half-time with Honda putting Taarabt’s long ball back into the middle with the outside of his boot only for Muntari to balloon the volley off target.

At the dawn of the second half Matri wasted a golden opportunity, turning his free header wide from seven yards on Joaquin’s cross.

Massimo Ambrosini got on the end of a free kick, but could only find the side-netting. Milan also wasted, as Balotelli pulled back for the unmarked Taarabt to blast over the bar.

Balotelli’s free kick had set up the opening goal, but he curled the second in directly by himself. It whipped round the wall into the near top corner to surprise Neto.

Clarence Seedorf has assured that there is no tension with Adriano Galliani, as he outlines his commitment to turning Milan’s situation around.

Vice-President Galliani is accompanying the 37-year-old and the squad this week on away trips to Lazio and Fiorentina, during a period of crisis for the club.

Whilst Barbara Berlusconi confirmed this week that Seedorf’s appointment as Coach was down to Silvio Berlusconi, the Dutchman insists it doesn’t make his situation with Galliani awkward.

“There was never any tension between us, the communication between us has always been there and we move forward to do good for Milan,” began Seedorf to reporters today.

“How am I taking my situation? I will respond philosophically…I have a philosophy of like that allows me to live moments of stress and difficulty with balance.

“I’m glad I have not read or heard certain things, I am a human being, but I have build my life with these issue and have always been successful.

“I get up early, do eight hours a day at Milanello to better prepare to the team and to bring home the results.

“There will never be anything lacking in my commitment, but now we are looking for results.”

Mario Balotelli was dropped for the weekend draw at Lazio, whilst attention is on Seedorf’s particular approach with him.

“From the first day I have tried to understand the needs of all. With Mario I have done the same thing, when he goes into the field I am very demanding because he has a lot of potential.

“He is a point of reference for the media, but there are not differences in my approach, even though the methods vary from person to person. Like with everyone I engage him in training.”

Seedorf was talking ahead of the team’s trip up to Florence, following on from a weekend draw at Lazio, which ended a four-game losing streak in all competitions.

“It was a positive result to follow a performance of substance. It was the reaction that we wanted and that we will need against Fiorentina tomorrow.

“A lack of chances created though? Against Lazio we had few chances, but we also gave away very little. In football, just a goal can win a game.

“Fiorentina have a way of playing that everyone likes, they have great players in attack. They are a squad that deserves great respect.

“Taarabt? No-one is ever set aside. Taarabt has been out for the choices I have made. He has had a great start, but we cannot expect him to be a saviour. We have a lot of quality forwards and no-one is put aside.

“Tomorrow he could return to the starting line-up. I’ve already made some changes, even against Lazio I made some changes.

“I am just trying to bring home the results. The formation for me is not sacred, my philosophy, how I see football, that is sacred. This fits into any formation. Kaka in Rome had a more central role, then in football you have to take advantage of the space that the opposing team leaves, and this was on the right [against Lazio].

“In Florence we won’t make many changes, they will have to be accurate because some players are not available. Having come back against Parma when down to 10 men was a good sign. The team is better.”

Adriano Galliani has confirmed that Milan’s players will automatically see their salaries drop in the summer for failing to qualify for the Champions League.

A miserable season for the Rossoneri has the team languishing 12th in Serie A, 22 points away from the third and final Champions League qualification spot, with nine games to go.

“Kaka said that at the end of the season he will come to me to talk about a wage reduction? There is nothing to add,” commented Galliani to the Gazzetta dello Sport today.

“Almost all the players have signed a contract that provides for an 80 per cent fixed salary and a 20 per cent variable, relating to the qualification or not to the Champions League. Not to the Europa League.

“So, there are no discussion about it. And I guarantee that all the players will survive…”

Billy Costacurta says that Milan took a ‘step back’ in their style of play against Lazio, but acknowledges it was important not to lose.

The Rossoneri broke a losing streak of four matches in all competitions on Sunday evening with a 1-1 result away to Lazio, which their retired centre-back surmised afterwards.

“The point for Milan in Rome is a building block, the team did not impress, but they stood up to Lazio and seemed better than in previous moments,” Costacurta has considered to Sky Sport Italia.

“It is a step back as far as the style of play is concerned, in some games I have found them to be livelier, but the importance at this moment was to get the point and the important thing was to not lose against Lazio.

“It is clear that Milan would not do that, even if they have not been able to play well.”

Adriano Galliani commented after Milan’s draw with Lazio at seeing the ‘right signs of fight’ from the team.

The Rossoneri ended a four-game losing streak in all competitions on Sunday evening to record a 1-1 result at the Stadio Olimpico, and leave their Vice-President, who is accompanying them this week, satisfied.

“This is a very, very important point. Beyond the point, the team fought and fought and we old directors see these things as a sign,” Galliani told Milan Channel post-match.

“There has been the goal from Kaka [awarded as an Abdoulay Konko own-goal] and in the final stages Balotelli hit the post, which could have given us the win, but the result is fair, that’s okay.

“The point stops the losing streak, but the team has fought, these were the signs given.

“The players went to the fans after the game? I saw this, there is only one way out of this situation, that is, with the cohesion between the club, Coach, players and fans - if we regroup then I think we can get out of this.

“We are close to the team and this is right and as I have done so for 28 years. I do not see anything different, the signals communicate that the team is fighting.”

“They showed that they are a compact group who want to go forward. They helped each other out throughout the game and it’s a shame we didn’t get all three points, but it was a balanced game,” the Coach told Sky Sport Italia.

Giampaolo Pazzini started the match rather than Balotelli, who did come on during the second half.

“I thought Pazzini could give us something more for this game due to his characteristics. I simply chose the side I thought could hurt the opponents more.

“I firmly believed we could surprise Lazio and I put on another striker, but unfortunately the equaliser came and the result remained like that.

“Adriano Galliani said he’d be happy if we played badly and brought home three points. So we know that if we keep that going then at least he’ll smile!

“We always try to give our best in terms of performance and style, but at this moment in time it is more important to be solid, effective and allow few scoring opportunities to our opponents. If we do that, then we can build game by game.”

The last few days have been filled with media speculation of crisis talks with Galliani and a supposed two-game deadline for Seedorf to turn the situation around or face the sack.

“There was never a separation within the club, as we were always in contact and I asked him to stay close to the squad because his experience is fundamental to calm the environment. That was the case even when I was a player.

“I was glad to see this reaction and character from the squad and club. In my Press conference I also pointed out that I never received any of the indications from the President or CEO that I had a deadline or any of the other things written this week. I remain with the indications I received when I signed the contract.

“I am enjoying the experience, when it comes to the daily work, training and being with the players. I am growing every day.

“I have tried to teach courage, bring back some joy to the players and give them belief, which is perhaps more invisible than tactical changes. It is a crisis when a Coach is fired, so I had to get the group back on track and in that sense I am satisfied with how we have progressed.

“The players are working very hard in training to improve and emerge from this situation. Tonight the result was another positive step forward.”

Both Lazio and Milan are in crisis and it showed with this 1-1 draw, as an Abdoulay Konko own goal was cancelled out by Tata Gonzalez.

These were two teams on the verge of a nervous breakdown, as the Biancocelesti ultras continued to leave the Curva Nord empty in protest at President Claudio Lotito, while there were on-going rumours Clarence Seedorf would be sacked with a heavy defeat in Rome after losing the last four in all competition. Miroslav Klose, Federico Marchetti, Michael Ciani and Ederson were injured with Antonio Candreva returning from suspension. Christian Abbiati sat out a ban following his red card against Parma, with Ignazio Abate and Stephan El Shaarawy sidelined. Mario Balotelli and Adel Taarabt were dropped in favour of Giampaolo Pazzini and Keisuke Honda.

It was a tense start and the hosts took the initiative, as Diego Novaretti failed to get his header from a free kick on target.

Brayan Perea was booked and some wanted an even harsher penalty for his mistimed tackle from behind on Adil Rami.

Honda blasted off target and Keita ran on to a Cristian Ledesma through ball, but was crowded out by Rossoneri jerseys.

Honda curled over the bar with Pazzini irritated that the Japanese international didn’t cross for him.

Lazio thought they had taken the lead on 41 minutes when Marco Amelia made a hash of Novaretti’s downward header, allowing it to squirm between his legs. However, the linesman had raised his flag, as Giuseppe Biava came back from an offside position and interfered with play, preventing Philippe Mexes from intercepting the cross.

Moments later it was Milan who took the lead with a moment of huge fortune. Kaka’s cross-shot down the left took a deflection off Abdoulay Konko’s face to completely wrong-foot Berisha at the near post.

In first half stoppages Honda wasted the chance to make it 2-0 with a free header over from a set play.

A deflected Konko strike from distance was smothered by Amelia and Honda seemed unhappy when substituted by Balotelli.

Amelia punched away a Candreva cross into the path of Lucas Biglia, so Nigel De Jong had to charge down the volley inside the area.

Lazio got a deserved equaliser on the hour mark, as another Candreva cross was whipped in from the right. Biglia flicked it on for Alvaro ‘Tata’ Gonzalez’s header from six yards.

Candreva failed to make the most of a counter-attack sparked by a Mexes error in midfield, then Balotelli’s free kick was straight into the wall. Andrea Poli was booked for dissent and will be suspended for Wednesday’s game with Fiorentina.

Gonzalez could’ve had a second, but he hesitated when sent through by Ledesma and allowed Rami to close him down.

Pazzini pounced when Konko failed to deal with a Balotelli cross, but volleyed over with the outside of his boot.

Balotelli was unlucky not to restore Milan’s lead on 82 minutes, as his snapshot flashed past Berisha to thump the base of the far post.

Candreva ran on to a clever cross-field pass in acres of space only to blast the finish into the empty Curva.

Sulley Muntari headed a Kaka corner over the bar, while Eddy Onazi also turned off target from a Keita pull-back.

Clarence Seedorf says he has not been told he only has the next two games to turn around Milan’s fortune, as he reiterates his self-confidence.

The 37-year-old yesterday evening met with Vice-President Adriano Galliani, with reports indicating that it was made clear that the Coach needs to show signs of improvement against Lazio tomorrow and Fiorentina in midweek, or risk the chop, after only two months on the bench.

“I have asked for this meeting, it was constructive and I asked the club to stay close to me and the team. It was a positive meeting,” reiterated Seedorf to reporters at today’s Press conference.

“Many things have been written, Galliani and I have known each other for many years. We always find agreement, I really respect his role and I think his experience is vital for the club.

“When I began this new role at Milan I asked to have at my side Galliani.

“I always give 100 per cent, I am sure I can achieve something important as a Coach. The commitment I have to Milan will bear fruit, I am convinced of this.

“I know now that the situation is delicate and complicated, but I am focused on the team, the opponent and the results that we are after.

“What needs to change? I have been here two months and every day I have tried to do something different, I always want to improve.

“Some improvement has already been seen, whilst it is right that we always talk about the results and in this sense things are not going well.

“No-one at the club has told me that the next two games are crucial for my future…

“I feel the dressing room is with me 100 per cent. I read of a few things, but I see a team that is committed and wants to do well.

“I feel responsible for what has happened since my arrival, but not what happened before.”

The Rossoneri face Lazio on Sunday evening, in their first appearance after last week’s 4-2 home loss to Parma.

“It would have been better perhaps to play right away. Exercising for a whole week is important, we have had a good week of work.

“I have seen a great reaction from the team, we hope to see that tomorrow. We want to get a positive result, which can be achieved through a positive performance.

“It takes courage and intensity to try and get a result, even as we know we will face a team that is tough to deal with.

“Every game can be a turning point, if we won against Juve we would not now be here talking about these things.”

The first item on the agenda at today’s conference was a question on Seedorf’s decision as a player in November 2007 not to wear a black armband to mark the death of Lazio fan Gabriele Sandri, shot by a policeman.

Today Gabriele’s brother Cristiano has once more been critical of the former midfielder’s actions.

“I’ve heard a few things about the death of Gabriele Sandri and I wanted to clarify the situation - that day I did not wear the armband because I did not know what had happened.

“It was not a gesture against anyone. I have really wanted to explain this to his family.”

Silvio Berlusconi has once more commented that he will remain active as Milan owner: “especially at a time like this when they need me.”

There were rumours earlier this month that the Rossonero owner and President was entertaining the idea of selling the club, after 25 years at the helm.

On from denying that, however, and addressing a political conference in Rome on Saturday, the 77-year-old has reiterated his commitment.

“One of the things I will occupy myself with again will be Milan, especially at a time like this when they need me,” half-joked Berlusconi to those in attendance.

The three-time Prime Minister of Italy also commented on reports that Milan director Barbara Berlusconi was in line alongside his other children Piersilvio and Marina to stand for election at the coming European elections.

“They are all inventions - my children will not be on the list at the next European elections.”

Clarence Seedorf has commented on his meeting with Adriano Galliani, backed his own potential as a Coach and called for a reaction from Milan’s players.

The Dutchman has faced a week of increased scrutiny over his future as Coach, less than two months into the role, as form has once more deserted the Rossoneri this season.

Whilst yesterday’s meeting with Vice-President Adriano Galliani was seen as crunch talks between the two to determine the 37-year-old’s future, it is one that the tactician insists was mutually arranged.

“Two days ago we spoke and we planned this meeting,” Seedorf commented to Milan Channel ahead of today’s Press conference, in view of tomorrow’s game away to Lazio, followed a few days later by a trip to Fiorentina.

“I am glad to see that the club is always close to the Coach and the team at all times. This is the strength of this club and we are working to get out of this difficulty.

“The rumours this week? My character has taken me to great success. Through work, commitment and my personality, I am convinced that I can also build a career as a Coach.

“But I still have a lot to do, I need time and the experience of Galliani will be very useful.

“With Galliani we decided that the team would stay for a training retreat in Rome, so as to give more rest in view of the difficult match against Fiorentina.

“Tomorrow’s game is very important, against a team that has experienced a similar year to ourselves. Lazio are a team of good quality, with great players like Klose and Candreva.

“We have prepared well this week. We have worked with great determination, we must continue to work to be ready for the next two games that on paper are very difficult.

“But we are Milan and we will try to bring home some points.

“When you play against big teams there are great incentives. This team has always shown great character and that is why I am expecting a big reaction this time.

“The boys have shown attention and work in these recent days. Tomorrow is very important, all the players have shown great effort this week. Today we will finish the last few steps before tomorrow’s match.”

Keisuke Honda is speculated as set for a start for Milan against Lazio tomorrow evening, but Adel Taarabt will remain on the bench.

With the Rossoneri searching for a positive result to turnaround recent form and ease pressure on Coach Clarence Seedorf, the Dutchman is reported by the Gazzetta dello Sport as set to give Honda another run from the first minute.

The 27-year-old has dropped to the bench recently, with his no-show from the bench last weekend against Parma seen as evidence that he has so far failed to convince.

It is understood that Honda will start in attack for the Diavolo against Lazio on Sunday evening, alongside most likely Ricky Kaka and Andrea Poli and one from Giampaolo Pazzini and Mario Balotelli.

Adel Taarabt, on from being dropped after the Champions League second leg defeat to Atletico Madrid, however, is seen as set to remain benched against the Aquile.

Adriano Galliani reportedly outlined to Clarence Seedorf yesterday evening exactly what is required of him to save his job at Milan.

The Dutchman has only been in charge of the Rossoneri since the end of January, but poor form and reports such as apparently telling Ultras he intends to offload three-quarters of the current squad have the club considering his future already.

Yesterday evening saw Vice-President and CEO Adriano Galliani meet with the 37-year-old, as he accompanies him on a pre-match training retreat for the squad ahead of their upcoming trips to Lazio and Fiorentina in the coming five days.

The Gazzetta dello Sport today say that this meeting saw Galliani outline to Seedorf the criteria for him to remain in his position, at least until the end of the season.

Whilst a turnaround in results in the next two fixtures is a must, it is supposedly not the only stipulation handed down to Seedorf.

It is understood that the Coach must also demonstrate a change in his managerial techniques with the current group of players.

Seedorf is reported by Tuttosport as using the meeting to strongly deny the comments attributed to him by one of the chief Ultras that he wants to ship out three-quarters of the playing staff.

Even so, it is reported also that assistant Mauro Tassotti has been put on alert, to prepare to take over in an interim role to the end of the season if Seedorf is sacked, before a decision on a long-term successor - rumoured to be Pippo Inzaghi - is made in the summer.

Milan’s Mattia De Sciglio has once again been linked with a move to Real Madrid this summer.

According to a report in Quotidiano Sportivo today, Blancos boss Carlo Ancelotti is interested in acquiring the 21-year-old defender from his old club.

The Rossoneri are planning a squad overhaul this summer and their asking price for the player is reported to be in the region of €20m.

While the Spanish giants have the resources to meet this without much difficulty, it is said they may even consider offering Portuguese international Fabio Coentrao to Clarence Seedorf’s side in part exchange.

Milan reportedly have Juventus sporting director Fabio Paratici on their list of potential recruitments this summer, but Sean Sogliano remains in pole.

The Rossoneri are widely seen as looking reorganise their structure behind the scenes in preparation for next term and are believed keen to bring in a new sporting director to oversee their new direction on the pitch.

Speculation today is that the club are interested in Juventus’ Fabio Paratici. The 41-year-old followed Beppe Marotta to Turin from Sampdoria in 2010 and has since overseen the Bianconeri’s technical development alongside the director general.

Tuttomercatoweb believe that whilst Paratici and Fiorentina counterpart Daniele Prade are both options Milan intend to look into, Sean Sogliano remains in pole position to be hired.

It is seen also that Juve are highly unlikely to want to part with Paratici.

Clarence Seedorf reportedly told Milan’s Ultras in January that he hopes to change up to three-quarters of the Rossoneri’s current squad.

The Gazzetta dello Sport, who today are running the line that the 37-year-old has two games to save his job at San Siro, also suggest that his intentions with the playing staff involve a complete renovation.

The paper quote Giancarlo Capelli, leader of the club’s Curva Sud Ultras, as telling them that Seedorf indicated as much to him during a meeting held in January, at the very beginning of his tenure as Coach.

“Seedorf told us that three-quarters of this team, who he has inherited, he does not want,” Capelli has told the Gazzetta. “He told us a week after arriving here.”

The Gazzetta dello Sport believe that Clarence Seedorf has two games as Milan Coach to avoid the sack.

The 37-year-old has been increasingly speculated as on the verge of a quick exit from the San Siro bench, after a difficult opening run since replacing Max Allegri at the end of January.

The Gazzetta dello Sport today echo previous reports in the week that suggest the Dutchman is at a real risk of losing his job, with Silvio Berlusconi, Barbara Berlusconi and Adriano Galliani having met this week to discuss the situation.

The pink paper suggest that should the Rossoneri’s current situation not show signs of respite over the course of the next two games, against Lazio and Fiorentina, then Seedorf will almost certainly be sacked.

It is reiterated that assistant Mauro Tassotti is in line to be put in temporary charge, before Pippo Inzaghi comes into consideration to take over from the summer.

Former Milan boss Arrigo Sacchi has called for ‘patience’ as the Rossoneri look to get out of their recent slide.

The San Siro outfit have crashed out of the Champions League and currently sit in 10th place in the table.

Legend Paolo Maldini unleashed a tirade at the club on Tuesday, but the ex-Coach has insisted that the Diavolo need actions not words.

“I agree in part with the things Maldini said,” he told Gazzettta dello Sport. “Although, now I think we have to roll up our sleeves.

“It’s difficult to know the future, but the past teaches us that Milan have already been able to get out of a crisis.

“Obviously we want healthy self-criticism, but we also need patience. Don’t forget that three years ago Milan won the League.

“I understand the objections of the fans, but with Milan, Berlusconi has won everything. The President and Galliani have built teams that have won before – one’s been considered the greatest of all time.

“I have respect for the fans but also for everyone else at the club. We have to tell the fans not to behave like those of less successful teams.

“Now we need to talk less and start to do things.

“We can’t judge Seedorf right now. We need patience. He’s smart guy and I like his ideas.”

Leonardo believes no one person can be blamed for Milan’s crisis, as he talks of links to Inter and the hope of a return to the field.

The Brazilian recently served as sporting director and Coach at San Siro for the Rossoneri and has cast an eye on the club’s current struggles on and off the pitch.

“I think it is normal, even if you can say that Milan were not prepared to experience this,” Leonardo has told Sky Sport 24 today.

“I cannot understand a complaint made against a single person, a player or Galliani - I do not believe this is the fault of one person, but of everyone who is in this situation.”

The 44-year-old left Milan as Coach at the end of the 2009-10 season and then spent six months of the following season as Coach at Inter, a club who he has been linked with making a return to, perhaps as sporting director.

“With Inter there remains a craving for something more, it is true. My relationship with President Moratti is important, I admire him very much, I have great respect for him.

“Today the roles are covered - there is Piero Ausilio and it is fair to give him a chance after what he has done for many years for Inter.

“Mazzarri is an experienced Coach who is doing well, and there is a President who has arrived with a project that he is managing with precision.

“My future? I’m very attached to the project, what one intends to do. I am not one to hold back and would evaluate a possible proposal.

Paolo Maldini’s strike out at Milan includes Adriano Galliani’s acceptance in 2011 to release Andrea Pirlo on Massimiliano Allegri’s say-so.

Pirlo endured a difficult final season with the Rossoneri under Allegri’s tenure and was released at the end of his contract, with Juventus picking him up that summer.

With the Bianconeri benefiting from consistent form from the Italy international, Maldini’s attack on the Rossoneri’s leadership today has included the decision to release the No 21.

“Leo wanted me at all costs to become sporting director. Galliani said that I was someone the club had moved on from,” stated Maldini in part of his interview with the Gazzetta dello Sport.

“It is not true. If you surround yourself with capable people then you can make fewer mistakes.

“The best example is Pirlo - if you have a Coach who says that Andrea as a player is finished and he is no longer needed, there must be someone in the club who replies ‘it’s not true, Pirlo is part of the tradition of this club and must remain’.

Stephan El Shaarawy was given the all-clear, but Ignazio Abate is out for 10 days, while Riccardo Montolivo and Daniele Bonera have problems.

Milan released a statement from the medical staff giving updates on various situations.

“Stephan El Shaarawy can begin athletic work with a view to resuming full training with the rest of the group in the coming weeks following his final check-up with specialist doctor van Dijk earlier today.”

It means the Little Pharaoh is finally on his way back to recovery after surgery for a microfracture in his foot.

“Bryan Cristante will recommence on a personalised training programme from tomorrow and will soon resume full training with the rest of the group.

“During Milan-Parma, Daniele Bonera suffered an adductor muscle injury and will be assessed by the club’s medical staff between Wednesday and Thursday.

“Riccardo Montolivo meanwhile suffered a lower back injury during the match with Parma in addition to a facial injury. The club captain will also be assessed between Wednesday and Thursday.

“Finally, Ignazio Abate has reported a muscle injury in his right thigh and will be re-assessed in 7 to 10 days’ time.”

Stephan El Shaarawy is set for consultation in the Netherlands today to ascertain the state of recovery in a foot injury.

The young forward has been out of action since the end of 2013 with a fractured toe, and today is reportedly set for a meeting with Professor Van Dijk to evaluate his process of recovery up to this point.

It is believed that if the prognosis is positive then the Italy international can begin a period of physical fitness recovery at Milanello, with an eye on a possible return to the team before the season is out.

Arrigo Sacchi says fans must have patience at Milan, as he backs Clarence Seedorf and Adriano Galliani amid crisis.

The Rossoneri are under increasing scrutiny from their support as a series of poor results continued with a 4-2 home defeat to Parma on Sunday afternoon.

Fans protested before and during the game, whilst the likes of Ricky Kaka, Mario Balotelli and Seedorf met with Ultras post-match.

For the club’s former Coach, who oversaw one Serie A title and two European Cup wins in the late 1980s, focus should be on the football, not on the fans.

“Because of 25 years of success, is it right that the fans challenge the club and threaten the team? It is a serious matter,” Sacchi has reflected on Radio Anch’Io Sport today.

“There is a lack of appreciation, a lack of respect towards the players. The violence has once again prevailed and in that environment it is difficult to grow. I would like greater support.

“You cannot always be on top, there are times when you go wrong and others are better than you, you must know how to accept that. In our football we lack civilisation.

“The choice of the right people is key, then return to a focused style of play and go and find the most suitable interpreters. Functionality first, then talent.

“In Italy, we think everything is born at the feet of the players, in fact everything comes from the mind. When I arrived at Milan, Van Basten, Gullit and Baresi had not won the Ballon d’Or, so you need a club with clear ideas. Milan must first not only win, but also persuade.”

Sacchi believes that the right people includes Clarence Seedorf, Adriano Galliani and Mario Balotelli.

“Arriving and managing players who you have not chosen is difficult. For the first time in a long time, the club, apart from anything else, have proven not to be cohesive in the past - it is broken at the top, let alone at the base.

“Fans must have patience - Galliani is one of the greatest directors, Berlusconi is engaged in politics and is less present, but Galliani is an added value to this club.

“There are those with a lot more money, so they serve to have more options. Milanello can be a workshop of champions - Real Madrid and Barcelona invest €40m-€50m per year on this issue.

“Balotelli? He is definitely a talent, but that does not mean that is enough. He has to find a positive environment, a game that will help him and a team that suits his qualities.

“Undoubtedly he does not seem very helpful. He has yet to mature as a person. At a technical level he has extraordinary talent - I was impressed when I saw him at Inter, but it is not enough.

“The individual cannot solve a complex problem, which in the case of Milan is the play.”

Former Milan legend George Weah attacks his former team via Twitter after lopsided loss to Atletico Madrid. The Italian press gives great coverage to the news, only to find out thanks to his agent’s denial- and after several hours- that it was a fake

If you have a good inventiveness and a Twitter account, you can be cited by the most important Italian websites. That's the case of the supposed George Weah, former Milan player (and Ballon d'Or in 1995) who pounced on Milan players after their elimination from the Champions League to Atletico Madrid. The legendary Liberian forward wrote a deluge of tweets such as these:

“I'm so sad. You are in a great crisis. You can't keep playing this way. If you are able to play what are doing there?”

“You don't enjoy the pitch, you don't enjoy the game. The best you can do is to go home and play some PlayStation4!”. The websites of the most important Italian newspapers and news agencies reported the news. Ansa, La Gazzetta dello Sport, la Repubblica, Rai Sport and many others. Actually what's odd is that no one questioned the truthfulness of the tweets.

The account @weah_official has not been verified by Twitter, a common practice for the majority of the celebrities on the web, including former players as Franco Baresi, for example. What's more, the daughter of George Weah doesn't follow the @weah_official account on Twitter. Finally, for those of you who speak Italian, the quality of the language of his tweets might- or rather, should- seem suspicious for a player who wasn't even fluent 15 years ago when he used to live and work in Italy every single day. Quite strange, isn't it? “We are uncertain about the authenticity of that account, we are verifying”, a Milan press officer said to SerieAddicted. But Fabio Parisi, George Weah ex agent, anticipated any official communication by the Club.

“The @weah_official account is FAKE. I just talked with George and he confirms it and warns not to use his name on Twitter”. The majority of the websites that fell into the trap without verifying grasped at straws, adding Parisi's tweet and editing the title.

But this story tells us, once more, with how much ease a fake news can spread online and – above all – how easy it is to fool even a journalist who works in the most important newsrooms. Actually, this fake account is online since November 2013 and, whoever exploited Weah's name, is very good at this, as he even convinced Ignazio Abate, Alessandro Nesta, Christian Vieri, Urby Emanuelson (the real ones!) to follow him.

Nobody remembers the last time the real George Weah released a statement on Milan, so the fact that he could blast the team for a poor performance should have raised some doubts. Doubts should have become certainties in re-reading his career with the rossoneri: after all his Milanese cycle started and finished with a Scudetto, but in the middle were an 11th and a 10th place, alongside two group stages eliminations from the Champions League versus teams like Rosenburg, Gothenborg and Hertha Berlin. Ok, at the time there was no Twitter, and only one Playstation, but can we be sure his fans didn't think exactly the same things that (fake) Weah wrote last night? Technological development runs fast, but some things never change...

Antonio Cassano’s brace and a fantastic Amauri flick gave Parma a 4-2 victory over 10-man Milan after Christian Abbiati’s early red card.

The atmosphere at San Siro was tense, as a fan protest outside continued into the Curva Sud, targeting Mario Balotelli and CEO Adriano Galliani in particular after three consecutive defeats between Serie A and the Champions League. Parma, on the other hand, were sitting pretty in sixth place and on a club record 15-round unbeaten run, though Gabriel Paletta was suspended and Walter Gargano injured. It was a return to this stadium for Antonio Cassano and ex-Rossoneri star Roberto Donadoni. Mattia De Sciglio sat out a ban with Stephan El Shaarawy, Bryan Cristante and Andrea Petagna sidelined.

Parma’s last official win at San Siro was the Italian Super Cup in 1999, but in Serie A the most recent was decided by Mario Stanic in 1996.

It was the worst possible start for Milan, as within six minutes Christian Abbiati had rushed off his line to clatter into Ezequiel Schelotto, who had sprung the offside trap. The goalkeeper was shown a straight red card and a penalty awarded, so Marco Amelia’s first job was to pick the ball out of the net, as Cassano fired his spot-kick into the near bottom corner.

FantAntonio was enjoying himself in his old hunting ground and a curling cross-shot was just past the far top corner.

Balotelli was unlucky not to draw 10-man Milan level on 18 minutes, as he flicked on a corner from six yards and saw it thump against the base of the upright.

Daniele Bonera crucially charged down a Jonathan Biabiany attempt, then Cassano peeled off his marker for an effort blocked by Riccardo Montolivo.

Balotelli sprinted to the by-line and pulled back, but Montolivo couldn’t turn it on target. Bonera was again decisive with a sliding tackle to stop Biabiany’s pull-back reaching an unmarked Schelotto from six yards.

Amelia needed a desperate reaction save from point-blank range to stop Philippe Mexes turning a Mattia Cassani cross into his own net. Mexes ran quite a few risks and before the break was fortunate to avoid a second yellow card, but he was not replaced during the break.

Schelotto ran rings round Bonera only for Afriyie Acquah to finish over the bar. It was all Parma and Cassano doubled his tally as well as their lead. FantAntonio was left in acres of space to turn in at the back post undisturbed.

Adil Rami came off the bench and scored within three minutes, his towering header beating two defenders at the back post on a Ricky Kaka corner.

That goal seemed to boost their confidence, as Kaka controlled a long Balotelli ball over the top and saw his shot crucially charged down by Cristian Molinaro.

Milan had penalty appeals, but replays show Molinaro clearly charged down a shot with his chest, then Balotelli blasted over from distance and curled another attempt just wide.

Parma seemed to rest on their laurels and were punished, albeit in controversial fashion, as Joel Obi was harshly judged to bring down Montolivo in the box. Replays suggest if anything Montolivo was holding Obi’s jersey and fell over in front of him, but Balotelli stepped up and coolly converted for his first goal in a month.

It was a remarkable comeback from 2-0 down for a team that played almost the entire match with 10 men. However, it did not last long, as Schelotto pulled a ball across from the right and Amauri flicked it in with his heel from six yards, improvising as the cross was slightly behind him.

Amelia prevented it being 4-2 in stoppages, as he used his legs to deny Schelotto, who this time was down the left flank.

However, the last move of the game saw Biabiany’s diving header beat Amelia from six yards.

Clarence Seedorf explained why he and Milan players met with ultras leaders after a 4-2 defeat to Parma, assuring he is “not arrogant.”

This was the fourth consecutive defeat between Serie A and Champions League, conceding eight goals in the last two.

There were protests before and during the game, while a group of players including Ricky Kaka, Mario Balotelli and the Coach went out to meet four ultras leaders after the match. Only after this encounter did Seedorf speak to the media.

“These are delicate situations with people who have this club in their heart, both on and off the field,” he told Sky Sport Italia.

“The meeting was very peaceful, they expressed their sentiments, but nothing in particular happened. They all want what is best for Milan, so after two years of suffering they felt the need to express their emotions.

“I have experienced this before, yes, at Botafogo a less calm one! We were fourth in the table and fighting to get into the Libertadores, so there was a feeling of worry.

“I was there briefly and there were also some positive things said, as everyone has great respect for the jersey. Sometimes it helps just to listen and give the fans a voice, so they know we hear them.

“After Atletico Madrid and Juventus, the fans applauded, as they appreciated the performance and the hard work. It’s not for me to explain their reasons.”

Milan had fought back from 2-0 down for 2-2, but capitulated late on 4-2 to Parma with Christian Abbiati sent off after five minutes.

“The players gave all they had today, trying to get back a game that started in the worst possible way.

“It was a strange game and obviously the red card after five minutes changed everything. The lads did well to fight back to 2-2, but their determination to get the victory ended up leaving the team unbalanced and we suffered this defeat.

“We never gave up. At half-time I told the players to believe, as even with 10 men we’ve seen before that teams can improve and get important results. They did well to get back on the field with that reaction and on 2-2 we perhaps should’ve read the situation better to avoid the counter-attack.”

Riccardo Montolivo started in a new trequartista role alongside Kaka and Andrea Poli behind Balotelli.

“It’s a shame, he got a knock and is in hospital for tests. I cannot judge his performance in that role, as I had to change everything after six minutes! He was in the best shape over the last few days and had recovered better after Madrid, so it’s a real shame we didn’t have time to play this way properly.”

Seedorf again hinted that Massimiliano Allegri’s tenure was behind the current problems, something he already said after the defeats to Juventus and Atletico Madrid.

“I will defend these colours right to the end. All problems that have come before and the journey to get us to this point is the past, so we must look forward and find a way to fix the problems. There’s no point finding a scapegoat.

“It requires more focus and concentration, as we pay a heavy price for every mistake and that’s what happens when a team is in a negative spiral.

“I continue to believe we will change the situation, get the best out of the players for the rest of the season and form a competitive side for next year.”

Considering the references to Allegri, Seedorf was asked whether he ought to be more humble and self-critical.

“I think my humility is in the hard work I do every day. I don’t see that I’ve done or said anything arrogant. In my view I’m pretty objective.

“I know that I have much to learn and have just started my coaching career, but I’ve also worked in this world for over 20 years and I know what the players are going through.

“I accept everyone’s opinions, as long as they are constructive. We admitted Atletico Madrid were stronger, so how was that not humble?”

Hundreds of ultras waited outside San Siro with banners and jeered at the team bus, which drove in round the back entrance.

The Curva Sud will be left empty in today’s Serie A showdown with Parma, click here for the line-ups.

“Of course it hurts, especially as people ought to remember the journey of this squad. I was looking at the statistic and over the last decade we’ve been the only Italian side regularly in Europe,” Galliani told Sky Sport Italia.

“We hope not to miss out on Europe next season, but if it does happen then it won’t be the end of the world.

“I am disappointed and it’s certainly not pleasing to see the fans against the team and part of the club, but I continue smiling.”

A statement released by the Curva Sud specified Galliani and Balotelli were among the main targets of their protest.

“I am very happy that we signed Balotelli and the fans ought to be too. If the club hadn’t snapped him up last January, then Milan would not have qualified for the Champions League.

“He helped us out this season too and has been here for just over a year, scoring more goals than anyone else.

“Unfortunately, people only remember the last game. People have a very short memory in football. Balotelli has done a lot and will do even more, while I don’t think a protest is the way of getting the best out of the players.”

Galliani was asked about Clarence Seedorf pinning the blame on predecessor Massimiliano Allegri this week.

“I think that the media enjoy pitting everyone against everyone else. I defended Allegri, who did well for three years, then the club – including me, as it’s not true that I didn’t want Seedorf – decided after 22 points in the first half of the season a change was necessary. Allegri understood that too.”

Milan legend Jose Altafini said Mario Balotelli is “the real failure” at the club and Clarence Seedorf is a “huge mistake.”

The former striker spoke to the Corriere dello Sport about the current crisis, as fans prepare a protest targeting Balotelli and CEO Adriano Galliani ahead of tomorrow’s game with Parma.

“Galliani did what he could. If anything, the real failure is Balotelli,” blasted Altafini, who is now a TV commentator.

“It’s no longer even surprising, as he keeps doing the same things. In my view we shouldn’t pay him any more attention, in the hope that eventually he’ll figure it out.

“Great players are above all distinguished by their character. Balotelli lacks it. Just compare him with Kaka and you’ll see.”

Altafini is also not convinced Seedorf should be Coach, taking over in January from Massimiliano Allegri.

“I said from the first day he arrived on the bench that he made a huge mistake in accepting Milan. He should’ve waited until June and started the season from the beginning, with a new squad at his disposal.

“The way things are going now, this group of players will end up penalising him.”

Clarence Seedorf insists he won’t “punish” Mario Balotelli in the Parma game, but again blamed “the situation” he inherited at Milan.

San Siro hosts sixth-placed Parma on Sunday at 14.00 GMT.

“Parma are in good shape, so it’s going to be a tough game,” the Coach told Milan Channel just days after a 5-1 aggregate Champions League defeat to Atletico Madrid.

“They are organised and have a lot of quality in attack. Roberto Donadoni has done a great job and achieved consistent results. I have to compliment him, but we’ll do everything to play with the Milan spirit.”

The 4-1 result at the Vicente Calderon on Tuesday was widely considered to be one of Balotelli’s worst performances, so will he be dropped this weekend?

“As a preventative measure due to a slight muscular problem, he stayed behind to work in the gym, but it’s nothing serious. It’s only natural for people to now seek scapegoats, but we will remain united and focused. If we had beaten Juventus and Atletico at home, then things would’ve changed.

“Do I use the carrot or the stick? I only use the carrot. When there’s the need to check on a situation, I do it, but my philosophy is to face everything with a smile. Will I punish him? I want a rapport between adults, not between an adult and a child. Will Giampaolo Pazzini start tomorrow? No.”

The ultras have announced a protest ahead of tomorrow’s Serie A game, particularly targeting Balotelli and CEO Adriano Galliani.

“I feel a lot of love and expectation from the fans towards me,” commented Seedorf. “They expect something more from me, but I am certain that I’ll do Milan good. It wouldn’t be football without the fans, so we must respect and understand their sentiments. They want effort and appreciate sacrifice.

“For the past two years Milan have been chasing down the others and psychologically it was tough. When I got here, I did not find a team in good physical or psychological shape. We can’t think everything will improve straight away.

“The players are improving, but results have not been consistent, so that is what we are looking for now. We have to turn the page, target European qualification and focus only on what happens on the field.

“There is nobody guilty here, as we are all working to get the best for Milan. With Galliani we’ll do everything in future to make the Milan fans proud of us. It’s a difficult situation right now, as we are lacking confidence.”

Seedorf was even asked if he felt himself at risk after a series of defeats, having only replaced Massimiliano Allegri in January.

“How many times has a Coach been at risk after a few months, despite signing a two-year contract? I am not responsible for the situation that was created. I am here to improve the situation.

“I have a contract, the club has faith in me and I am trying to give my best. There was a lot of work to do here, so I am certain that with me the club will construct a strong Milan for future seasons. It doesn’t matter if you are not optimistic, because I am.”

Eric Cantona said Mario Balotelli and Zlatan Ibrahimovic can’t be considered “football rebels,” but Paul Pogba was right to quit Manchester United.

The Frenchman spoke to La Gazzetta dello Sport at the presentation of a documentary on rebels in the sport.

“Ibrahimovic, Balotelli and I cannot be considered rebels,” declared Cantona.

“We might not fit into the boxes created by you journalists, but we are nothing if compared to the Chilean Caszely, whose mother was tortured because he opposed a dictatorship, like Socrates in Brazil, the Bosnian Pasic who remained in Sarajevo to teach football to children under bombardments, Drogba who opposed the war in the Ivory Coast or Mekloufi who gave up on a career with France to fund the national team of Algerian rebels.

“Balotelli is a great player and you can see his talent in the goals he scores. He also has great mental strength to put up with the enormous media pressure.

“Balotelli is the example for a country that is only now starting to deal with immigration. To be one of the first black players in your national team makes him a little like Viv Anderson for England in 1978. All of this makes him special, just as the children of immigrants like Kopa, Platini and Zidane were special for France.

“Maybe one day Balotelli will be a part of one of my documentaries.”

Cantona hit his peak at Manchester United, but praised fellow Frenchman Pogba for leaving Old Trafford.

“Pogba certainly did well to quit Manchester United and Juve did well to take him.”

Finally, the often troubled former forward explained why he was arrested for assault this week.

“I had a row with a paparazzo. He was too invasive. I spent three hours in the police station, but the scandal was created by the journalists, as he doesn’t have a scratch on him.”

“It is going to be a difficult game, Milan want to get back on track and have a squad with great quality,” said Donadoni in his Press conference.

“However, we must focus only on ourselves. We need to try to show our best qualities and keep raising the bar on an individual and collective level so we can bring home another positive result. That is the mission.”

The Ducali are on a club record 15-round Serie A unbeaten run and consolidated sixth place with last week’s win over Verona.

“We are in a positive moment, but we must make the most of it without being superficial. We still need to prove ourselves, especially in an important and complicated game like the one that awaits us.”

Milan, on the other hand, have lost their last two Serie A matches and were knocked out of the Champions League on Tuesday, 5-1 on aggregate by Atletico Madrid.

There will be a fan protest in the stands, targeting CEO Adriano Galliani and star player Mario Balotelli among others.

“We mustn’t let ourselves get distracted by what will happen off the field tomorrow, as it would be a huge risk and counter-productive for us,” continued Donadoni.

“I want to be concentrated on my team and focusing my energy on that. I lived a different era at Milan, not the current one.

“Those who base their own success on how they measure up to others are losers. We have to think only of our own path, with no calculations and no distractions.”

“When you go out of the Champions League like that and are inconsistent in Serie A, it is only normal for criticism to rain down on you. However, they need the right balance, especially in difficult moments.

“Unfortunately, Italian football always piles too much tension on to situations. It will be very difficult for us, as we are without Gabriel Paletta due to suspension and Milan have a thousand reasons to give it everything they’ve got.

“This is the worst possible moment to face the Rossoneri. Having said that, we have no intention of stopping.

“The key to our success is in our desire to improve every day in every training session. To aim high, we’ve got to enjoy the struggle. If that feeling is there, then I am happy.

“The important thing is to realise an entire season cannot be judged on just one result – and that goes for Milan as well as Parma. Am I the Coach of the moment? If I am, then it’s down to the players who got me to that level.

“As a player at Milan, they used to call me ‘bone’ – because I would not let things go. That’s what I’m like, as to go home after a training session I must feel I’ve given my all. I am very demanding with myself and consequently with others too.”

Donadoni worked with the greats at San Siro, so is he more like Arrigo Sacchi or Fabio Capello in his management career?

“Sacchi was non-stop. The only thing in his head was football. Capello was less intense, but still very demanding. He wasn’t a hard man at all, as you could have a row and the day after it was all back to normal. He understood things and ensured he was understood.”

Antonio Cassano had problems at Milan and with Capello at Real Madrid, but seems to have found his niche at Parma.

“What method did I use with him? Dialogue. Antonio can be extremely difficult to control, but also very easy. It depends on how you approach him. At this precise moment, it’s impossible not to care about him. In December he was stirring up trouble and then I had to bring the best out of myself to calm him down.

“I spoke to him, I listened and these are the results. In football terms he has another gear. In Italy the only others with talent like him are Andrea Pirlo and Francesco Totti. He belongs in the top 10 players in the world.

“Parma has a family atmosphere that is beyond mere cliché. The other day they were all together for dinner and nobody had obliged them to be there. In my many years at Milan, things like that never happened. In the long run, that makes the difference.”

Donadoni had similar advice for Milan and Cesare Prandelli in their treatment of Mario Balotelli.

“If we really want what is good for him, the less we talk about Balotelli, the better.”

Milan Ultras on the Curva Sud will hold a pre-match protest against Adriano Galliani and some of their own players on Sunday.

The Rossoneri have been heavily criticised since their Champions League exit to Atletico Madrid and it seems many fans have had enough.

“As a result of yet another disappointment resulting from this troubled season, and having already mentioned a protest in December, now we have decided that we have run out of patience,” a statement on the Curva Sud website reads.

“We have identified those who, in the opinion of our fans, are the key figures who have led our Milan into this bad situation.”

One of these figures is Galliani, who they hold responsible for the club’s recent transfer activities.

“We wonder, for example, how it was possible to send away Ambrosini, who as well as being the captain was a strong voice in the dressing room,” the statement continues.

“Even more we wonder how it was possible to release Pirlo and not to grant him a three-year contract on his terms.

“Today the results of this policy are the horrible sight before us.

“Milan are 37 points off the top of the league and out of everything.”

Milan’s players will not get an easy ride either.

“We come now to the team, made ​​up of a few serious professionals but surrounded by a host of useless overpaid players.

“Their first thought is to put idiotic photos on social networks or to book a table for a lovely night at the disco.

“We wish they would follow the example of real professionals like Montolivo, Bonera, Abbiati, Kaka, De Sciglio, Abate, De Jong, Poli and Pazzini to name a few.

“We hope that the boss Seedorf takes serious action against such players as there is no longer a place for them.”

Mario Balotelli today trained with the rest of the Milan first team squad as they prepare for their weekend match with Parma.

The 23-year-old trained alone yesterday after suffering a slight muscular strain following the Rossoneri’s defeat to Atletico Madrid.

It had been feared that this would rule him out of Sunday’s game against Roberto Donadoni’s side, but the Azzurri international completed the full session at Milanello and may now be available after all.

Mattia De Sciglio and Brayan Cristante however were again forced to train separately from the squad as they continue their recovery from injuries.

Clarence Seedorf has been ordered to finish in the Europa League places this season or face the sack.

Corriere dello Sport report this afternoon that the Milan Coach has been contacted by President Silvio Berlusconi, with the Rossoneri chief telling the tactician that he will be fired should the team not qualify for European competition next term.

The San Siro outfit are currently 10th in the table, eight points off sixth place Parma.

And despite the former midfielder being handed a contract until 2016 earlier this year, the paper believes that Berlusconi will have no qualms about ditching Seedorf should they finish outside the top six.

Antonio Mirante has warned Parma of a Milan looking to react this weekend, as he outlines his objectives to the end of the season.

The in-form goalkeeper and his Ducali colleagues head out to San Siro on Sunday afternoon to face the Rossoneri, on a club record unbeaten run and eight points and four places above Clarence Seedorf’s side.

Even so, Mirante sees a test for he and his defence at the Giuseppe Meazza.

“Sunday will be an uncomfortable game because Milan will want to make up for the Champions League elimination and they have so many players who can provide a decisive action in the game,” the 30-year-old has considered to the Gazzetta dello Sport today.

“Balotelli? I judge and study him as an opponent, he has a strong shot and a decent speed of execution.

“Our form? At the beginning of the season we conceded too many goals. With the work and experience, we have found the right balance.

“Playing four at the back gave us cover, and then from that has come the individual performances. Paletta has gotten into the national team, Lucarelli as captain is 36 and still a pillar, then Cassani and Gobbi are always in place.”

Mirante’s performances of late earned him a call-up to Cesare Prandelli’s training camp held in Rome for the first three days of this week, and it has him dreaming of what might be come the summer.

“Going to Brazil is an objective, I’m happy with myself and I have confidence in the choices made by Cesare Prandelli.

“It would be great to reach Europe with Parma and then go to the World Cup.

“I am a goalkeeper for an act of bullying, my brother forced me and now here I am. In my career, I was lucky enough to arrive at Parma after two years at Sampdoria.

“Here I have found an environment that has believed in me and allowed me to play with continuity.

“I owe a lot to Luca Bucci, who has played for this club and won a lot - he has taught me to become a complete athlete.”

Reports are that Mario Balotelli has been sidelined by Clarence Seedorf in reaction to Milan’s midweek Champions League elimination.

The Italy international has faced criticism for his performance for the Rossoneri during their defeat against Atletico Madrid on Tuesday evening.

Whilst his absence from training yesterday was initially explained as due to a thigh problem, the Gazzetta dello Sport lead speculation that in fact he was primarily sidelined to the gym by Coach Seedorf for his attitude.

Whilst the forward’s injury is described as surmountable in time for Sunday’s visit of Parma, it is understood that Seedorf will choose to use Giampaolo Pazzini from the start, over Balotelli.

Seedorf is speculated as perhaps ready drop as many as half a dozen of those who started in midweek in Madrid, with the Dutchman seen as pushing for a greater simplicity and concreteness to the team’s play.

Cesare Prandelli has called for calm on drawing assessments on Milan’s season and laughed off Luciano Spalletti’s links to the Rossoneri.

The sacked Zenit St Petersburg Coach has in some quarters of the media been paired with possibly replacing Clarence Seedorf at San Siro in the summer.

But, according to Italy Coach Prandelli, to assess Milan’s season based on their recent disappointing exit to Atletico Madrid and League defeat to Udinese is not wise.

“Milan is not a disaster, there are too many expectations being placed on a team that is changing, that is finding a new structure to reorganise for the future,” Prandelli has told Rai Sport this week.

“I do not look at the results, but at the quality of person and in Seedorf there are many ideas.

“Spalletti to Milan? He does not need anyone’s backing, he has great ability.

“It makes me smile, because 10 days ago Seedorf was the saviour of his club but now there are rumours about Spalletti. But, Italian football can get weary.”

Arrigo Sacchi has backed Adriano Galliani as the man to oversee Milan’s new start, whilst he says Clarence Seedorf ‘has great ideas’.

The Rossoneri are set for a restructuring during the summer in response to a disappointing season which has left them off the pace in the League and eliminated from the Champions League at the Last 16 stage to Atletico Madrid.

Whilst sharing his directorial role with Barbara Berlusconi, Galliani has received backing to oversee the next stage of Il Diavolo’s plans from one of the club’s most notable former Coaches.

“I would start again with Adriano Galliani,” Sacchi has declared to the Gazzetta dello Sport today.

“He is the right man to create a new project. He knows how to move, the first move is to identify the young talent before the other clubs, and everything depends on the Coach.

“Seedorf has great ideas, total football has always been at the base of the big teams.”

Sacchi was highly critical of Milan’s performance against Atletico post-match.

Andrea Poli concedes Milan had “the wind knocked out of us” by Atletico Madrid in the first half.

Diego Costa opened the scoring within three minutes, then Arda Turan’s shot took a huge deflection to make it 2-1 during the Rossoneri’s most intense period of pressure.

“Conceding such an early goal was not a promising start,” the midfielder told Sky Sport Italia after a Champions League 4-1 defeat.

“After the 1-1 we had another opportunity to score and I really didn’t sense Atletico were superior to us.

“Then the goal for 2-1 meant we had the wind knocked out of us before half-time. After the break they ran riot because they are a great side.

“In repeat, in the first 30 minutes I didn’t get a sense Atletico were superior or dominant. We leave with a bitter taste in our mouths. We came here to put in a great performance, but they did better than us.

They went out of the Champions League 5-1 on aggregate, losing 4-1 at the Vicente Calderon tonight.

“You could see after the second goal that the team struggled psychologically to react, as they often do. The second goal turned off the light and sapped the energy from the team,” Seedorf told Sky Sport Italia.

“We analysed the situation together. Obviously the Champions League was an important objective for us and economically for the club. We had played well in the first leg and showed in the first half tonight we could play on a par with Atletico, but couldn’t be consistent for the whole game.

“We spoke clearly and set objectives in the League, which is our only remaining target. There are 11 games to go and we have some very specific objectives, which are the ones we believe we can get. It’s our only tournament, so the squad must feel a realistic sense of what we can achieve.

“We can’t throw away the good work we’ve done. Of course it is very sad to go out of the Champions League and the players are very disappointed, but I am here to lift them up, let them know they can keep working the way they have done and face Parma with the spirit of a side that wants to make up for this setback.”

Seedorf was asked about the Rossoneri’s stamina and again pointed to Allegri’s tenure before he took over in January.

“We’ve said more than once that the fitness levels I found here weren’t optimal, but that’s normal to struggle when you have been chasing since the start of the season.

“This moment of difficulty lasted so long that it affected the team. They can react once, but after a second blow they can’t get back on their feet.

“In the second half the whole team no longer produced the right level of grit and determination to keep fighting. We sat back too much and in general it was not positive.”

Despite the setbacks, Seedorf insisted he did not regret ending his playing career in Brazil early to take this job.

“I am absolutely convinced I made the right choice. I wore these colours for 10 years, the President gave me so much and the club is trying to rebuild what has been lost.

“This request pleased me and it was not ideal to take over midway through, but we are preparing for the future and trying to end the season as best we can.”

Milan’s Champions League campaign is over after a 4-1 defeat away to Atletico Madrid, 5-1 on aggregate.

The Rossoneri had to overturn a 1-0 home defeat to reach the Champions League quarter-finals. Mario Balotelli had his first start since suffering a shoulder injury in the first leg, Sulley Muntari returned from suspension on the bench, but Riccardo Montolivo was still suspended and Keisuke Honda cup-tied. Atleti had Filipe Luis back from injury, though Javi Manquillo and Tiago were long-term absentees.

Diego Simeone’s men had won 15 of their last 16 European home games, a run blemished only by a 2-0 to Rubin Kazan in the Europa League in February 2013.

It took just two minutes and 34 seconds for Atleti to double their lead on aggregate, as a Koke cross was whipped in from the right for Diego Costa to volley in at full stretch at the back post, having peeled away from a distracted Adil Rami. Michael Essien had given possession away in midfield.

It was almost 2-0 on nine minutes, but Diego Godin volleyed inches wide on the end of a free kick. Balotelli chested down the ball and turned between two defenders only for the scuffed shot to finish calmly into the arms of Thibaut Courtois.

Milan did equalise before the half-hour, as Poli floated a cross in from the right and found Kaka’s cushioned header at the back post. It was a precious away goal, the Brazilian’s 30th in the Champions League, and also a morale-booster after going behind so early.

The Rossoneri started getting more possession and gaining momentum, as Atleti seemed slightly shell-shocked by that goal. Kaka nearly got a second with his header just over from six yards on an Adel Taarabt corner.

However, against the run of play Atletico Madrid restored their lead. Arda Turan’s half-volley from the edge of the D took a huge deflection off Rami to loop over a helpless Christian Abbiati.

Raul Garcia almost scored the goal of the season moments later, his spectacular overhead kick skimming the far post by a matter of inches.

Balotelli was irritable and ineffective, then booked before the break for dissent, meaning he’ll be suspended for the next European game.

Within seconds of the restart Diego Costa had flashed a shot across the face of goal, then Atleti went on the counter from a Milan corner and Gabi’s finish clipped the crossbar.

Rami was accidentally kicked in the back of the head by Diego Costa during an attempted volley, then Courtois smothered at substitute Robinho’s feet on an Essien knock-down.

Balotelli saw his free kick deflected over the bar and Miranda’s header was into Abbiati’s arms. Robinho shot from a very tight angle to force a one-handed Courtois save in a dangerous scoring opportunity.

Clarence Seedorf threw on Giampaolo Pazzini too, but Atletico Madrid extended their advantage with a goal that highlighted the strengths and weaknesses of each team. A Gabi free kick was floated in for the towering header of Raul Garcia.

Robinho had the chance to open the tie up again moments later when he ran on to a Kaka through ball, but smacked his strike on to the crossbar as Courtois came tearing out.

Milan visibly lost confidence and Diego Costa added a fourth with his angled drive from a tight angle in off the inside of the far post.

In the other Round of 16 tie this evening, Bayern Munich eliminated Arsenal 3-1 on aggregate after a 1-1 draw in Germany. Lukas Podolski scored against his old club, but a Bastian Schweinsteiger strike ensured qualification was never really in doubt. In the final minutes Lukasz Fabianski saved a Thomas Muller penalty.

Mario Balotelli and Andrea Poli are both seen as in line to make Milan’s starting XI against Atletico Madrid this evening.

The Rossoneri are at the Vicente Calderon tonight for their Champions League Last 16 second leg, looking to overturn a 1-0 deficit.

Previous fitness doubts for the encounter, reports are that both Balotelli in continued struggles with a shoulder issue and Poli, after sustaining a blow to the head against Juventus recently, will make the starting line-up.

Poli is seen as in line to feature alongside Ricky Kaka and Adel Taarabt in an attacking three behind lone forward Balotelli, whilst central midfield will be Nigel de Jong and Michael Essien, in the suspended Riccardo Montolivo’s place.

Defence is expected to see Ignazio Abate and Urby Emanuelson on the flanks, with Adil Rami and Daniele Bonera sitting in front of Christian Abbiati.

Meanwhile, Diego Simeone’s quandary for Atletico Madrid reportedly hinges on selecting Raul Garcia or David Villa to support Diego Costa in attack. Los Colchoneros are at full strength.

Clarence Seedorf was disappointed with an “avoidable” defeat to Udinese, but still believes Milan can beat Atletico Madrid.

It is the first time this season the Rossoneri have lost two Serie A games in a row, beaten 1-0 by an Antonio Di Natale strike.

“Of course there is disappointment, we can never be happy after a defeat, especially an avoidable one,” said the Coach on Sky Sport Italia.

“I asked straight after the game for the team to focus on the next target, as if we dwell too much on this performance it will sap confidence ahead of next week’s Champions League game.

“I told the players to keep believing, as there were 20 minutes after the goal. They gave what they could and clearly there was a lack of freshness in some players who were on international duty midweek.

“We weren’t determined enough in front of goal and today encountered a good goalkeeper. We knew Udinese’s strength is pouncing on errors and going on the counter, so we should’ve made better choices in our passing and not tried to go through the middle.

“On the goal it was an impressive move and you could also see our legs were tired compared to theirs.”

Milan have lost two in a row now and failed to find the net despite having a series of attempts.

“I must continue working and said from the start this would be a long process. We certainly won’t scrap or forget the good work done so far,” added Seedorf.

“I believe it is an issue of individual reading of situations rather than a collective one, as that would be more difficult to fix. We made some changes thinking of next week. I had wanted to substitute Muntari earlier, especially as he was on a yellow card and I know with him that’s dangerous!”

Keisuke Honda made a rare start, but again struggled to make an impact.

“He must give himself the patience to get to know Italian football. I am convinced he can do very well cutting in from the right. It’s never easy when there are too many expectations, so I think the thing he needs the most is time.”

The Rossoneri now travel to Atletico Madrid, where they have to overturn a 1-0 home first leg defeat to stay in the Champions League.

“We are convinced that we can win, as we can win any football match. We all saw the first leg performance and how that could’ve gone for us.”

Antonio Di Natale finished off a brilliant team move to give Udinese a 1-0 victory over Clarence Seedorf’s Milan.

The Rossoneri rested several stars ahead of their Champions League trip to Atletico Madrid, while Stephan El Shaarawy, Andrea Poli, Bryan Cristante and Andrea Petagna were injured. The Friulani missed Andrea Lazzari and the suspended Danilo, but still ended their month-long winless streak. Coach Francesco Guidolin was on the bench, but still suffering from flu symptoms.

Udinese had a great chance after three minutes when Roberto Pereyra burst through down the left on a mazy run and forced Christian Abbiati into a desperate one-handed save, then a Cristian Zapata clearance prevented Antonio Di Natale getting the rebound.

Moments later Giampaolo Pazzini’s header was over from six yards after Mattia De Sciglio ran on to a Riccardo Montolivo cross-field pass.

Pazzini nodded another De Sciglio cross inches wide when 17-year-old goalkeeper Simone Scuffet failed to intervene. At the other end, Abbiati had to smother at Widmer’s feet when his first touch let him down on a free kick. Remarkably, Abbiati made his Serie A debut when Scuffet was only two years old.

It was a fiery affair with three bookings in the opening 17 minutes, including De Sciglio who’ll be suspended against Parma next week. Zapata wasted a golden opportunity when a corner found him unmarked at the back post, but his diving header was wide.

Moments later Scuffet performed a fine one-handed save on Pazzini’s effort from close range and parried a Robinho snapshot. A splendid Di Natale first touch trapped a ball over the top and Philippe Mexes crucially deflected the finish off target.

After the restart Scuffet performed a great reaction save on Robinho’s glancing header from an Urby Emanuelson cross. Honda showed his talents in defence with a sliding tackle to stop Di Natale going clear.

Mexes gave the ball away in his own penalty area, but was fortunate Di Natale rushed the finish and fired wide.

Udinese did break the deadlock with a well-worked team move. There was great one-touch passing between Pereyra, Bruno Fernandes down the left and rolled into the middle for Di Natale to tap in from eight yards. It was the veteran’s 12th career goal against the Rossoneri, his 185th in Serie A.

Substitute Mario Balotelli blasted over the bar, but the hosts continued to have the better of the game and Allan’s curler skimmed the far top corner.

Balotelli’s flick with his back to goal sent Pazzini clear, but Scuffet was alert to block at his feet. Scuffet also flapped away a Michael Essien header, while from that corner Luis Muriel went on the counter to test Abbiati.

Adel Taarabt feels he “flourished” at Milan and did nothing but “waste two or three years” with QPR and Fulham.

The Moroccan international spoke to local media after a friendly game against Gabon this week and had harsh words for his Premier League owners.

“Have I finally found the club I need to show my talents? Clearly,” he told Le Matin.

“There is no comparison between where I’ve been and where I am currently. Milan is a great club and I am well suited to it here. There are all the conditions to let me give my best.

“I am fortunate to be at a great professional club, one that strives to ensure the players only have to focus on the pitch. When you are in a context like this, it makes you transcend your limitations.

“I flourished at Milan and it shows on the field. I am happy to join this great club and hope to stay as long as possible.”

It’s particularly surprising to see the January signing’s form considering he struggled to get into the first team at QPR and Fulham.

“I would say that I wasted two or three years of my career staying at Queens Park Rangers. I did not change or develop much in that time.

“People have judged me on my behaviour off the field and generally it was unfair. I’m not saying that I didn’t screw up, but it was a bit exaggerated. Now I hope they will judge me on my performance on the field.

“When you look at a player like Ricardo Kaka, he is class personified. A Ballon d’Or winner. When you play alongside this kind of player, it makes you want to work hard. Playing alongside professionals of this calibre, you learn and evolve.”

Clarence Seedorf has defended his misfiring Milan frontline and confirmed Cristian Zapata and Mario Balotelli’s availability for this weekend.

The Rossoneri head out to Udine on Saturday evening off the back of a promising performance last weekend against Juventus, but also with a 2-0 defeat.

With his team having missed a number of first-half opportunities, Seedorf was asked before his pre-game Press conference on Friday on that lack of a cutting edge.

“I focus on the fact that we have created, it is very important to create those chances,” the 37-year-old responded to Milan Channel.

“Nobody misses on purpose, I do not need to remind anyone of how many strikers do not score for three months.

“Then, suddenly they will come back into the goals. This is football, it is a spinning wheel - someone who knows how to score goals like Pazzini, Balo and Kaka can stay dry. Eventually they will score.”

Milan can welcome back Mario Balotelli and Cristian Zapata for tomorrow, according to the Coach.

“Zapata is fine, he has finished training well. Bale is still feeling pain, which is normal, he will have to live with it. They will be available for Udinese.

“Udinese? We need to give continuity to our performance, if not then we cannot help the result.

“I hope to see the team with the same character and concentration. The result will be a consequence of that.”

Brazil skipper Thiago Silva says he in full support of seeing former teammate Clarence Seedorf at the Milan helm: “I am of fan of his.”

The Dutchman played alongside the Brazilian for three seasons at San Siro, before both departed at the end of the 2011-12 campaign.

“He is a great Coach and a Coach with a lot of intelligence,” the defender has told Football Italia’s South African correspondent Rossella Marrai, during Brazil’s Gillette Global tour.

“He can change a lot of things at Milan. I am a fan of his, above all, because he is a friend.”

Thiago Silva also featured for 90 minutes during Brazil’s 5-0 demolition of Bafana Bafana on Wednesday evening at Soccer City, a fixture which marked the passing over of South Africa’s host nation duties to Brazil.

“We played well, we played a beautiful game,” continued the Paris Saint-Germain player.

“We finished some perfect training sessions and now I am concentrating on the Champions League and the French League and finishing the season off well.”

The international friendly against African opposition was also deemed as preparation for Brazil’s final Group A match against Cameroon in the World Cup.

And the 29-year-old says his Selecao teammates have to be wary of what the Indomitable Lions can do.

“All the African teams in the World Cup are good teams who play well, therefore, we have to be cautious.

“Cameroon is a team who likes to play with the ball and doesn’t like to mark players. We now have to prepare well and study them well.”

Jose Mourinho holds fond memories of Mario Balotelli and says he’d work with him in the future, even if that possibility seems unlikely.

The Portuguese tactician’s two years with Inter saw him struggle to work with the young forward and he once labelled him as ‘unmanageable’.

However, having seen current side Chelsea recently linked with making a bid for the now Milan player, the 51-year-old has a fonder appreciation for his previous time spent with the 23-year-old.

“It was great fun, I always thought that was great fun and I have good memories of that,” Mourinho has considered to Yahoo Sport this week.

“Obviously with a kid like him - when he was a kid, maybe now he is a bit different - at that time you have your ups and downs and we had our ups and downs.

“But at the end of the day I enjoyed it, I think he enjoyed it too.

“He learned a few things – or not! – but he enjoyed it too and he was a Champions League winner at 18-years-old.”

Mourinho was asked of the prospect of working with Balotelli once again.

“In football you never know the future but I think at this moment he is with a big club, Milan.

“I suppose that they want to keep the best players and they want to keep the best Italian players.

“He was already in English football, for sure I am not going to be his manager at Milan or at the Italian national team so I don’t think there is any situation in the future but he’s a good guy, he’s a good kid.”

Mario Balotelli says he is ‘trying with all his strength’ to return for Milan in time for their weekend trip to Udinese.

The Rossoneri have been without their forward since he sustained a shoulder injury during the first leg of their Champions League Last 16 tie with Atletico Madrid.

Reports are that Clarence Seedorf is hoping to put the 23-year-old through a targeted training regime in the coming days, with a view to handing him a few minutes against Udinese on Saturday evening and to then have him fully fit in time for next midweek’s return match against Atleti.

On from this, the striker has revealed that he is targeting a weekend return, through his official Twitter account, where he posted an image of his shoulder during ultrasound therapy.

“The impossible! I’m trying with all my strength to recover for Saturday!” wrote Balotelli this morning.

“I cannot stand any more to not play.”

Yesterday evening Balotelli challenged his followers to a game of ping-pong: “And if someone think to beat me just let me know! I own you all i bet! I Never lost!”

Milan’s holding company Fininvest has denied speculation that Silvio Berlusconi is looking to sell the Rossoneri.

Bloomberg broke yesterday evening the story that the Berlusconi family, who have held ownership of the club since 1986, had appointed Lazard Ltd to oversee a potential sale.

Whilst reports have been that Lazard Ltd have already sent out relevant information to prospective purchasers for the club last valued at €688m, Milan’s holding company Fininvest have issued a denial.

“Despite the numerous denials, rumours about the possible sale of Milan have come back into circulation,” the statement issued late last night says.

“Fininvest reiterates once again that these hypotheses are totally without foundation.”

The Gazzetta dello Sport suggest that Silvio Berlusconi is also reluctant to sell Milan, which has prompted Fininvest to look to a possible sale of another asset from under their umbrella. The company own Mediaset and publishing company Arnoldo Mondadori too.

Mario Balotelli and Andrea Poli trained separately from the rest of the Milan squad this afternoon, according to reports.

The Rossoneri, though somewhat depleted due to the absence of their international players, completed the session today at their Milanello base.

The aforementioned duo however were restricted to doing gym work, with Balotelli still recovering from a shoulder injury sustained against Atletico Madrid and Poli on the way back from a blow to the head during Sunday’s defeat to Juventus.

One positive for Clarence Seedorf’s side was, report milannews.it, that defender Matias Silvestre did train with the group as he nears making a comeback from a lengthy lay-off.

Manchester United have shifted their attentions from Angelo Ogbonna to another Italian defender, reports suggest.

The Premier League outfit have been linked with a move for the Juventus man in recent weeks, but Il Tempo suggest that David Moyes is not convinced by the Italy international, and will now move from the Bianconeri to Milan for his next target.

The same paper claims that the Old Trafford side are now interested in signing Mattia De Sciglio in the summer.

Some of Europe’s biggest clubs have been rumoured to be circling around the Rossoneri graduate, with Real Madrid also reportedly interested.

However, it is the English giants who are now keen on De Sciglio, and with a hefty budget available, are willing to splash out to get their man.

Milan have been linked with Carles Puyol after he announced he was leaving Barcelona at the end of the season.

The 35-year-old defender made the announcement today, revealing he had decided to terminate his contract with the club two years early.

“I am here to announce I am leaving Barcelona at the end of the season. After two knee operations, I cannot perform as I wish,” he told reporters.

“I do not know what I will do after June 30. I will need to rest and think. We will see then.”

In February 2013 Puyol revealed his passion for the Rossoneri.

“I love Milan, it’s my second team. I always want them to win, except against us. If I’d have left Barça, I would’ve liked to have gone to Milan, but I’m old now and I want to play at my club until I retire.”

Now that he has opted to leave in May, he could crown his San Siro dream as a free agent, although it is reported a move to Qatar is more likely.

Puyol has won six Liga titles, two Copa del Rey trophies and three Champions Leagues in his time with the Catalan giants.

A majority of high profile Coaches in Italy polled are in agreement over the introduction of video technology into the game.

The Corriere dello Sport have this week announced the results of a quick survey asking whether or not the Italian game would benefit from the use of ‘moviola’ - television images - to determine key decisions live.

The publication report that of the 25 tacticians they asked during yesterday’s assembly at the Panchina d’Oro at Coverciano, 16 showed they are in favour of bringing in technological assistance.

“We use television in other sports, why not in football, certainly I am very much in favour,” Milan boss Clarence Seedorf has offered.

Rudi Garcia has this week seen Daniele De Rossi handed a three-game ban thanks to video evidence, and he sees a contradiction to not using replays in game: “I ask myself and I ask you. In Italy, no-one wants to use TV images for replays, but then they disqualify players based on video evidence. Why?”

Lazio were eliminated in the Europa League by Ludogorets in a second leg result that saw the Bulgarians awarded a goal even as replays suggested the ball had not entirely crossed the line.

“The referees behind the penalty area have not solved the problem,” Edy Reja has considered.

“In line with the posts you would need a sensor to determine whether or not the ball had crossed the line.”

Not everyone was in agreement, however, with Vincenzo Montella proving the only Serie A Coach asked to say no to the suggestion, whilst Zdenek Zeman offered that: “It would be the end of football.”

In total, eight Coaches rejected the notion when put to them yesterday, whilst Sinisa Mihajlovic abstained: “I don’t know, what is the moviola?”

Urby Emanuelson has revealed how Clarence Seedorf has changed things at Milan and commented on the belief in European qualification.

The Rossoneri replaced Max Allegri with the Dutch tactician in January and have since seen an upturn in form.

Whilst Milan were defeated on Sunday night at home to Juventus, their performance was well received and is seen as the latest example of a rejuvenated spirit.

For their returned full-back, the change under Seedorf has been at a psychological level.

“He has changed a little the mentality of the group,” explained Emanuelson to Sportal.it today.

“The Coach has asked us to help each other, to trust in ourselves and to give everything on the field, as if we were always playing a final.”

Il Diavolo sit 10th in the table and a handful of points behind those in the Europa League qualification places, whilst progression in the Champions League against Atletico Madrid hangs in the balance.

“I think that at this moment, third is a difficult goal, but Europe is still within reach, because we are not

very far away from the Europa League qualification places.

“I believe that it is possible to make a comeback like we did last year - we must think game by game and play to the fullest, as the Coach asks of us, then we’ll see…

“The Last 16 clash with Atletico Madrid? I think we can beat them, because we played very well at San Siro and we were a bit unlucky with the woodwork, with Kaka first and then Poli.

“The 0-1 result is not a fair reflection and we can reverse it in Madrid - just play as we did in Milan and have close attention - that’s the recipe.”

Emanuelson was asked for his view on loan signing Adel Taarabt.

“I have seen him play before, as an opponent last year in the Premier League and I assure you that last year he seemed very strong!

“He was really the star at QPR because he is an unpredictable player who can beat his man, provide an assist at any moment of a game.

“I guess that he has the makings of a champion and he can do really well here at Milan, also because he is one who believes in himself and plays without fear.”

Adriano Galliani has enthused at the growth he has seen in Milan and remarked at how there was ‘no difference’ yesterday with Juventus.

The Rossoneri fell to a 2-0 defeat at home to the Bianconeri, but had dominated large passages of play and had missed several goalscoring opportunities before Fernando Llorente netted just before half-time and Carlos Tevez wrapped it up in the second half.

“The team is growing, the first half was beautiful,” began Vice-President Adriano Galliani in conclusion.

“We are progressing, even when we lose and we are sorry - I see the glass as half full. A good defence, good midfield, there are players to return too.

“Clarence told the players what had been achieved - we have not seen a difference between Milan and Juventus.

“I have spoken to the President and he is calm, satisfied with the performance of the team. This is also his thought, that the team is growing.”

Seedorf said after the 2-0 result at San Siro that the only way to stop Juve is with a tank.

“We hope we never cross paths with it! Today we met half a tank, as Milan played an excellent game in every aspect, were very enthusiastic, kept the tempo very high in the first half and had numerous chances to score,” the Coach told Sky Sport Italia.

“We did well to make the most of a good combination in attack. In the second half we adjusted tactically and suffered less under pressure, controlling the situation and we could’ve added more goals.

“Compliments to Seedorf and this Milan. Let’s not forget under my tenure we’ve always had huge problems at San Siro, never winning here before.”

The Bianconeri are now 11 points clear, albeit as Roma have a game in hand, as the Giallorossi and Napoli were held to draws.

“Now to get this victory when I was afraid we’d lose points compared to the chasing pack, but instead we gained an advantage, is remarkable.”

Milan had dominated the first half and Conte admitted he didn’t expect to go into the break 1-0 up.

“In the first half the defence wasn’t working very well, as we were spread too wide and Milan kept finding Pazzini behind Pirlo. My objective was to at least hold on to the 0-0 at half-time before making tactical adjustments in the locker room.

“Carlos Tevez is the kind of player who gets more fired up the more passionate the game is. He’s a fiery person and brings the best out of himself in difficult situations.

“Fernando Llorente was also extraordinary tonight, as he caused the Milan defence a lot of problems. I am very happy, as in seven days the different strike pairings all did well. I need the whole squad for this season and am getting comforting responses from everyone.”

Juventus have 11 points more than at this stage last season and Conte had particular praise for Leonardo Bonucci, who performed a crucial goalline clearance.

“Let’s not forget these players have been consistently on, especially Bonucci who had to play more than expected due to injuries for Giorgio Chiellini and Andrea Barzagli. I want to thank him in particular, as it isn’t easy to be at that level so regularly.

“Paul Pogba took part in the Under-20 World Cup and only had 15 days to rest this summer. He played regularly due to Pirlo and Marchisio injuries, so at his age it’s inevitable there will be a slight dip in form at Juve’s level. He is doing very well, he still needs to grow and knows full well as long as I am in charge he’ll have a carrot on one side and a stick on the other.”

“This is the result, but I’d say it was a very good performance. We knew that we were facing a great side, but we imposed our tempo on the game and eliminated their strengths as much as possible,” the Coach told Sky Sport Italia.

“Juve were able to sit back even more in the second half after taking the lead, but I am impressed with the growth of the team.

“I helped the players to find their courage. We said before the game, this was another opportunity to prove to ourselves we are on the right track and can play well against Atletico Madrid, Juventus and a good Sampdoria. That gives us confidence to continue the work.”Juventus are now 11 points clear at the top of the table, even if Roma have a game in hand.

“Who can stop them? A tank! Compliments must always be given to a team that has shown its strength throughout the campaign. Tevez made the difference with two moments and showed he is world class.

“We had many chances, were unable to turn them into goals and as we saw tonight that can prove costly.

“The two goals can be read in certain ways and we could’ve blocked Lichtsteiner’s run, while on the second if Emanuelson had closed down then Tevez wouldn’t have had so much space. However, when you get a shot like that – and I’ve had a few of those in my career – you can only sit back and applaud a fantastic goal.

“We too have very talented players, for example Kaka, who can make the difference the way Tevez does. I think what really makes the difference is the confidence and structure behind the scenes, as they can ride any difficult moment knowing they’ve won two titles in a row and we do not have that situation.

“We have seen our spirit grow in the last few games, keeping up with Juventus in terms of tempo and determination too. Of course you need to take your chances to control games, but the team is getting there.”

Milan paid the price for wasting chances, as Juventus conquered San Siro with Fernando Llorente and a Carlos Tevez blockbuster.

Antonio Conte’s men are now 11 points clear at the top of the table, even if Roma have a game in hand, and 17 points clear of Napoli in third place.

The Rossoneri had to reshuffle with Mario Balotelli, Stephan El Shaarawy and Bryan Cristante injured, while Sulley Muntari was suspended. Christian Abbiati and Daniele Bonera returned after suffering from flu. Giampaolo Pazzini wore a face mask to protect a nose injury. Juve didn’t risk Giorgio Chiellini from the start and drafted in Claudio Marchisio for the banned Arturo Vidal, while Kwadwo Asamoah passed a fitness test. The Bianconeri were fresh from Thursday’s 2-0 Europa League victory away to Trabzonspor and Andrea Pirlo stepped back into the stadium that was his home for a decade.

Early on Adel Taarabt tested Gigi Buffon from distance and then his cross was nodded wide by Pazzini.

Juventus had a great chance on 17 minutes when Fernando Llorente only scuffed his attempt, but the ball kept going for Stephan Lichtsteiner who forced Abbiati into a desperate reaction save with his knee.

Less than 30 seconds later Milan had an opportunity, but Pazzini just failed to get the flick before Buffon on an Ignazio Abate assist.

Milan somehow failed to score on 26 minutes with a strong counter. Kaka’s first shot was parried by Buffon, then the second beat him only for Leonardo Bonucci to perform a desperate goalline clearance.

Andrea Poli ballooned over after Pazzini’s effort was charged down on the edge of the box, then Buffon beat away a Riccardo Montolivo snapshot from distance.

Taarabt’s first touch let him down when Kaka robbed Andrea Barzagli. Milan were dominating as the first half wore on and Buffon acrobatically flew to palm away a Kaka curler, but again Poli couldn’t keep the follow-up on target.

However, it was Juventus who got the ball in the net with a well-worked move. Claudio Marchisio pounced on an Adil Rami error to pull back for Lichtsteiner and the ball eventually fell to Fernando Llorente to turn in unmarked from seven yards.

After the restart Tevez tested Abbiati with an angled drive after shaking off Rami, then Buffon beat away a Taarabt cross-shot that Pazzini didn’t connect with.

Poli wasted another good chance, his header wide from a Kaka curling cross under pressure from Martin Caceres. The former Sampdoria midfielder clashed heads with Caceres during that move and came off worse, having to be stretchered off. The Uruguayan was able to continue with a large bandage.

Andrea Pirlo was booked for a studs-up challenge on Ricky Saponara and will be suspended for next week’s game against Fiorentina.

Juve doubled their lead with an astonishing strike from Tevez, who gathered from 20 metres and unleashed an incredible right-foot blockbuster that bounced in off the underside of the bar. Abbiati would’ve probably broken his hand if he had got a touch to it. This was also Tevez’s 15th of the season, making him lone Capocannoniere.

Clarence Seedorf praised Antonio Conte and Juventus, but sees this game as “an opportunity” for Milan.

It kicks off on Sunday at 19.45 GMT.

The Dutchman has faced Juve many times in his playing career, but this will be his first as a Coach.

“We will have a packed San Siro behind us, just as we did against Atletico Madrid. The lads really need it,” he said in his Press conference.

Mario Balotelli remains in doubt after sustaining a shoulder injury in the 1-0 Champions League defeat to Atleti.

“It is also important to have all the players at my disposal, as everyone trained regularly apart from Balotelli and Giampaolo Pazzini. Balo needs to be examined today, while Mattia De Sciglio and Pazzini are available, albeit with a bit of pain.

“Pazzini is more experienced than Balotelli and is already a complete player, whereas Mario is still learning. Giampaolo’s motivation is a guarantee.”

Seedorf was asked whether this showdown with leaders Juventus represents a test of Milan’s maturity.

“I think the trip to Sampdoria was more than this game. Samp were unbeaten at home in 10 games, whereas against Juve it is an opportunity.

“This is my first Milan-Juve as a Coach. I feel honoured and privileged to experience it at such a young age. For the team this is the chance to put in a great performance, build confidence and help us face the rest of the season in the best way.

“Antonio Conte has done a great job and I tip my hat to him. Since winning the title in the first season, Juventus have only improved. When you win the self-confidence grows and players get more accustomed to working together.

“I have never worked with Conte, but he certainly helped to renew Italian football. I consider him a very positive influence, like Vincenzo Montella at Fiorentina. I still have everything to prove and am trying to learn quickly.

“Serie A is the toughest League in the world precisely because every Coach is well-drilled in tactics. In terms of players the level of individual stars might’ve dropped because the money migrated elsewhere, but it’s still a very high level.”

Seedorf confirmed it is “very probable” Andrea Poli will start tomorrow evening, but shrugged off questions about referees or the infamous Sulley Muntari phantom goal that wasn’t awarded in Milan-Juve.

“Muntari’s goal? I don’t remember anything about that. I don’t want to cause controversy, but I share Montella’s comment that we must all try to be united. Controversy is a headache. We should have technology to help referees, who in Italy are very good, but until we do then we’re always going to have these debates.”

UEFA have confirmed that 76 clubs will be ordered to submit information about their finances ahead of new Financial Fair Play rules.

In April the Club Financial Control Board, which is responsible for implementing the new rules, will reveal which of the clubs will be referred to its disciplinary panel for sanctions.

The rules are being brought in to force so that clubs live within their means, and to try and prevent those with rich owners from simply spending their way to success.

In principle, clubs cannot spend more than their generated revenue although they are allowed cash injections of up to 45 million euros over three years. Spending on training facilities and youth development is exempt.

"UEFA is taking the lead to protect European football from greed, from reckless spending and financial insanity," Infantino told reporters.

"Financial Fair Play basically proposes helping the clubs to live within their revenues in a sustainable way," he added.

"UEFA is not seeking to exclude or isolate clubs, Financial Fair Play is to help the clubs but on the other hand UEFA is not afraid to take the necessary measures to protect the game."

UEFA said all the 237 clubs who qualified for European competition this season have been assessed. Of those, 103 were ruled exempt as their revenue or income was below the minimum of 5 million euros annually.

Reports in several media outlets, including the Daily Mail and The Guardian suggest that Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain could be two of those clubs.

It is not known however, whether any Italian sides will be caught up in the sanctions.

After the Atletico disappointment despite a decent performance and the Sampdoria bore-fest that ended favourably, Clarence Seedorf's men are ready to face the Serie A leader, Juventus, which, despite being the best team in the league, still failed to qualify from their Champions League groups and are facing second rate opponents in the Serie B of European football.

The match kicks-off Sunday, March 2nd, 20:45 CET and the only value at stake is the honor of both teams, as Juventus seems set to win another title while most Milan fans would like to see the team not play Europa League next season.

AC MILAN

It was expected in mid-week for Mario Balotelli and Mattia De Sciglio to be fit by kick-off and right now it seems that both will make despite Mario still feeling pain in his right shoulder and not training with the team on Thursday. Robinho and Valter Birsa are also expected to return.

Confidence is running at a decent level again at Milan with several players including veterans Daniele Bonera and Riccardo Kaka coming out in the press stating the club is getting better, a thought that is shared by Pippo Inzaghi as well.

JUVENTUS

Giorgio Chiellini was expected to make a comeback in the league with this match but reports suggest he might not be fit enough to start. Angelo Ogbonna is expected to replace him.

Arturo Vidal will be serving a one-match suspension but Kwawdo Asamoah could be returning form his injury to feature in the game.Pepe and Vucinic are both out injured.

REFEREE

Marco Guida has been appointed to officiate this game.

TEAM FORM

AC Milan (WWLWLD) - not a particularly bright season for Milan but ever since Seedorf took over there are signs that the team's performance is slowly but surely getting better and better, having recorded 4 wins and 1 draw in the last 6 Serie A games.

Juventus (WWWDW) - on the other side, Juve's outstanding form continues; no wonder since most of its Serie A competitors have been mismanaged for a quite a while.

AC Milan - Adel Taarabt has been in sensational form lately and many Milan fans will be looking to see whether he can keep this up for another game. All eyes will also target another winter signing, Adil Rami, to see whether he can cope with the high pressure of such an important Serie A match.

Juventus – the midfield wonderkid Paul Pogba is a sure bet when it comes to choosing the best from Juventus, even more so now that Arturo Vidal is out injured.

OTHER FACTS

Juventus beat Milan on San Siro 1-6 during the 1996-1997 season. On the other hand, Milan beat Juve in Turin 1-7 on February 8th 2014, with 4 goals scored by none other than Gunnar Nordahl.